21,879 reputation
338106
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location Toronto, Canada
age
visits member for 3 years, 4 months
seen May 16 at 22:06
stats profile views 913

"Enterprise" developer/architect with an EE background and experience/interest in:

  • Microsoft .NET / Visual Studio
  • Delphi
  • VB/VBA (although I try to forget)
  • SQL Server, SQL CE
  • Web Services (SOAP, WSE, WCF)
  • Web Applications (WebForms, MVC, JS)
  • Embedded Systems (HCxx, PIC, etc.)
  • UI Design & Data Visualization
  • Project Management
  • and probably a bunch of other things...

Mar
7
comment Why were some historical non-constructive questions undeleted?
@AdamRackis: Oh, let's see here... New "Hidden Features" questions... Python Persecution? Hidden-features question closed... Why is my community wiki topic closed? ...zero place for poll questions? Why are some subjective questions open while others aren't?, Compare open-endedness... need I go on?
Mar
7
comment Why were some historical non-constructive questions undeleted?
@JohnMcG: One question had 15 delete votes before a moderator stepped in. Pointing to a meta question where a relatively small number (compared to the number of question views) of anonymous voters upvoted a few posts full of empty rhetoric regarding questions which are not even currently under discussion does nothing to substantiate what appears to be your position on the subject.
Mar
7
comment Deleted posts should not influence reputation
Having a question/answer deleted does tend to imply that you did something wrong. There may be some innocent bystanders but that is the exception that proves the rule.
Mar
6
comment Is “making the internet a better place” still a useful or relevant test for individual questions?
Joel also seems to equate that phrase to people simply liking a question; it's too bad Jeff's not in the podcasts anymore because I'm sure he would have had a few words about that.
Mar
6
comment Is “making the internet a better place” still a useful or relevant test for individual questions?
Well, if nothing else, this has proven to be the most controversial question I've ever asked on meta, or anywhere. Regardless of how it pans out, I think it's been effective in exposing the clear philosophical divisions that apparently run far deeper than simply "inclusionism" vs. "deletionism". Apparently there are still many unresolved questions around whether rules are prescriptive or descriptive (or something in between), how current community sentiment should be weighed against the founders' expectations/ideas, and what role instinct/intuition plays/should play in the whole process.
Mar
6
comment Show embattled deleted questions to the public as if they were 10k+ users
@CodyGray: I've had a laugh at some of the lame puns. But on the other hand, I don't shed any tears when they get deleted. I'd like if people could enjoy their fun in moderation without the disturbing emotional attachments. But, seeing as how they can't, preserving just the "best parts" isn't a bad idea.
Mar
6
answered Show embattled deleted questions to the public as if they were 10k+ users
Mar
6
comment How many questions on meta have asked, “Why can't I ask this question when that question is open”?
I do like your proposed solution of the "historical" flag causing the question to be hidden from the top-voted/most-popular/greatest-hits lists. That's a totally reasonable compromise. I don't think that zoning is such a great analogy, because the frequency at which you'll see a builder just go right ahead and start trying to build a commercial building in a residential area (or vice versa) is somewhere between seldom and never. Instead, they either lobby to have the zoning changed, or ask for a zoning variance in advance of building. That's much more manageable than requiring cleanup.
Mar
6
answered Is “making the internet a better place” still a useful or relevant test for individual questions?
Mar
5
comment Is “making the internet a better place” still a useful or relevant test for individual questions?
@RobertHarvey: The most recent example was in our chat room yesterday, although it's certainly not the first and my intent isn't to single out a specific person. I guess I'll have to dig around for more "public" examples, I'm sure I can find a plethora of examples using SEDE.
Mar
5
comment Is “making the internet a better place” still a useful or relevant test for individual questions?
I guess your answer here is a correct definition of how the principle should be applied, so on that basis it merits a vote. I'm just of the mind that this normally isn't how it's applied - typically, if there is any justification, it's usually as you say, an argumentum ad populum or something even less logical.
Mar
5
comment Is “making the internet a better place” still a useful or relevant test for individual questions?
Fair enough. Maybe my question took the wrong tack. I guess what I should have asked is, what is the standard by which we should hold each other accountable when choosing to ignore rules and guidelines in favour of "making the internet a better place"? But the issue has enough attention already, so maybe I will just consolidate some of this into another answer.
Mar
5
comment Is “making the internet a better place” still a useful or relevant test for individual questions?
This answer makes no effort to back up any of its assertions. Simply declaring something does not make it so.
Mar
5
awarded  Good Question
Mar
5
awarded  Notable Question
Mar
5
comment Is “making the internet a better place” still a useful or relevant test for individual questions?
But you're just assuming that there is a valid reason being provided with the makes the internet better commentary. If that's true, then why do we need the latter? The reason itself is sufficient. Yes, I agree that if the comment is accompanied by a clear and reasonable justification, then it is a better argument than blind rule-following, but how often have you seen that happen, as opposed to seeing the phrase used in isolation?
Mar
5
comment Why were some historical non-constructive questions undeleted?
Although the way in which this question was written may have been over-the-top, the underlying issue is a completely legitimate one. Moderators are elected by the community, developers are not. Why are a tiny group of "admins" unilaterally overriding the decisions made by several members of the community and the moderators whom they elected?
Mar
5
comment Is “making the internet a better place” still a useful or relevant test for individual questions?
@RobertHarvey: As a foundational principle, of course it's important. This whole discussion is, in fact, a discussion about the earnest need to debate the actual merits of posts; all too often, I see the phrase making the internet better used as an attempt to avoid that debate. It's a trump card that gets pulled out when there's no other justifiable reason for some decision.
Mar
5
comment Is “making the internet a better place” still a useful or relevant test for individual questions?
Really, you consider a constitution to be a set of laws, not principles? How do you break one? Whatever your definition is, it is entirely in opposition to the dictionary definition.
Mar
5
comment Is “making the internet a better place” still a useful or relevant test for individual questions?
...and the point of this question is, if make the internet better doesn't mean anything definitive by itself, then why do we need to mention it at all? I never said that it's not a good principle - which unfortunately is how people seem to be interpreting the question anyway - I'm asking if it's a useful validity test for Q&A threads. Many guidelines and actions may stem from the MIB principle, but of what particular use is it in resolving disputes?