| bio | website | |
|---|---|---|
| location | ||
| age | ||
| visits | member for | 1 year, 4 months |
| seen | May 14 at 0:01 | |
| stats | profile views | 201 |
Snark Overflow
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Mar 23 |
comment |
SO/SE should activate Google Chrome Frame @animuson, to avoid breaking intranets that rely on old IE. |
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Mar 23 |
comment |
Link text over 70 characters fail to render in comments Test: [what-can-i-do-when-getting-sorry-we-are-no-longer-accepting-questions-answers](meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/86997) |
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Mar 22 |
awarded | Nice Question |
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Mar 22 |
revised |
Topicness of “brain teaser” questions with no practical value on SO? added 585 characters in body |
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Mar 22 |
comment |
“Member for: today” "Member since 2 days ago" would work, but it's still awkward. |
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Mar 22 |
comment |
“Member for: today” "Member for today" does sort of sound like he has some kind of temporary membership that only lasts for a day, like a guest pass at a gym or something. The expansion of that would be "This user has been a member for today," which sounds very temporary to my ears. "This user has been a member for 1 day" sounds more... normal. /$0.02 |
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Mar 22 |
answered | Open Source Advertising - Sidebar - 1H 2013 |
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Mar 22 |
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Negative comments drive new users away, how can we fix this? If they feel intimidated, it's probably because they see others asking questions like they would ask, and getting shot down. The students who are confident in their question-asking ability shouldn't feel intimidated by this; they'll realize that the backlash is coming from poorly-asked questions rather than naive quetions, as Cody points out above. If their confidence is well-founded, they should be just fine here. Maybe some good-question-asking training is in order? |
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Mar 22 |
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“What have you tried” epidemic If you chalk it up to a social problem of lazy commenters, is it still something that can reasonably be addressed here? I doubt SE has that much influence over society; it seems to broad to fix. If you pidgeonhole it as a problem with one specific sentence, it seems to narrow to be worth fixing. If you look at it as a problem with redundancy in comments, though, it seems more like a problem that can be reasonably fixed on SE's end, even if it takes a bit more work than treating just the WHYT symptom. Maybe part of the code that suggests potential duplicates could be reused for comments... |
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Mar 22 |
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“What have you tried” epidemic It feels like a stopgap fix, honestly. I don't think I've ever personally written WHYT in a comment, and I agree that it's not that useful, but blocking individual sentences seems like it could lead to an uphill battle. Would it make more sense to block any subsequent comments that are nearly the same as previous comments on the same question? This seems more generally useful. Sure, you can still get a single WHYT, but they won't pile up, so the issue here would still be resolved. |
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Mar 21 |
comment |
Topicness of “brain teaser” questions with no practical value on SO? "How can I use a circular saw to change the oil in my car?" The problem, as has been stated many times, is that it's not practical, in addition to not being answerable and not representing an actual problem you face, and therefore is not appropriate for SO, as it detracts from the intended purpose of the site, as stated in the FAQ. Is it really that hard to grasp? |
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Mar 21 |
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Topicness of “brain teaser” questions with no practical value on SO? Not to mention... "what have you tried?" ;) |
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Mar 21 |
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Topicness of “brain teaser” questions with no practical value on SO? @thg435, really? Care to explain what's preventing you from just doing foo.match(/..?/g)? |
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Mar 21 |
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Topicness of “brain teaser” questions with no practical value on SO? @Bart, thanks for the heads-up. I'm more interested in the overall consensus on questions like this, though... I'm confused by the comments indicating that this might actually not be off-topic, when the FAQ seems to be very clear on this (see my edit). This particular question is neither answerable, nor practical, nor an actual problem that anyone faces. |
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Mar 21 |
revised |
Topicness of “brain teaser” questions with no practical value on SO? added 460 characters in body |
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Mar 21 |
comment |
Topicness of “brain teaser” questions with no practical value on SO? Alright, so the upshot of this is, the questions are off-topic, but the flags will be declined anyway? Because out of all the flags I've cast, these are the only two that have been declined. Many of those flags I cast right away, and they were upheld, so I guess these "brain teaser" questions are some kind of special case? |
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Mar 21 |
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Topicness of “brain teaser” questions with no practical value on SO? @Bart, I guess I didn't think of CVing as "handling it myself," since it requires the help of four other people. Flagging it seems closer to "handling it myself," since it only requires the help of one other person. |
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Mar 21 |
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Topicness of “brain teaser” questions with no practical value on SO? @Bart, I did CV, just wanted to speed up the process a bit. This might be where I'm misunderstanding flags. Is there something already written that explains the proper use of flags in these situations? |
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Mar 21 |
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Topicness of “brain teaser” questions with no practical value on SO? @BilltheLizard, then maybe I'm misunderstanding the flag system, and need to be asking a different question. I figured I should just flag it right away instead of waiting. |
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Mar 21 |
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Topicness of “brain teaser” questions with no practical value on SO? I don't think code golf would work in this case, because the goal could be achieved much more succinctly without the silly rules. |

