| bio | website | slashdot.org/~n8r0n |
|---|---|---|
| location | United States | |
| age | 38 | |
| visits | member for | 1 year |
| seen | 12 hours ago | |
| stats | profile views | 29 |
Freelance software developer in the USA, specializing in embedded and distributed systems, intelligence and defense domains, and smartphone applications.
First StackOverflow user to earn both an iOS and a BlackBerry badge ... although I was the second to hold iPhone+BlackBerry (Marc Novakowsi)
First user to earn a Jailbreak (iOS) badge
95th user to earn the silver iOS badge
Sorry, but I don't do chat. Software development is a knowledge exercise, that requires concentration, and a lack of interruptions, to do well. Chat forces constant context-switching, and loss of efficiency as a result of these interruptions. I post on Stack Overflow in my free time, when I've already been interrupted for other reasons, but I can't spare the time to hang around in chat rooms. Thanks for your understanding.
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May 1 |
comment |
Why is the time limit for editing comments only 5 minutes? If comments are only meant to be temporary, then they should just disappear entirely. They don't. They stay around. As such, not being able to edit them increases the chance of them being, or becoming, misinformation. Combined with the other bad feature that comments can be voted up, but not down, further increases the chances of getting bad information from comments. Your justification boils down to "comments are second class citizens because comments are second class citizens". In the end, people don't process information that way. They read it all (posts and comments). |
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May 1 |
comment |
Why is the time limit for editing comments only 5 minutes? If you don't allow editing of comments, then it becomes possible for the comment to become out of context (because the question/answer it belongs to was edited or another comment was removed). Worse yet, if you made a mistake in your comment, and realize it after 5 minutes, you usually can't fix it. Sure, if it's the last comment, I'll just copy it, delete it, and make a new one with the correction. But, that seems like an unnecessary hurdle to put in place. |
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May 1 |
revised |
“Review” long question messes up with stats shown on right grammar/spelling |
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May 1 |
suggested | suggested edit on “Review” long question messes up with stats shown on right |
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Apr 14 |
comment |
Assign Java syntax to Blackberry tag @DuncanJones, I think the only concern I'd have with that is that for tags to really be used properly, they need to be obvious and intuitive. People like Michael, or myself, who spend lots of time curating the BB content, could adapt to such a tagname. But, newbies, who generate most of the questions, are unlikely to think to use that tagname ... unless SO has some features I'm not aware of, whereby it can dynamically react as you type in tags, and suggest replacements. More than just normal autocompletion. |
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Apr 14 |
comment |
Assign Java syntax to Blackberry tag @MichaelDonohue, yeah, even RIM/BlackBerry themselves are trying to establish that "BlackBerry 10" is a whole new thing, rather than simply the next version of the OS. Maybe similar to Mac OS X, where version 10 was a major overhaul of the OS. The BB 10 split is probably even more of a difference from its predecessors. |
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Apr 13 |
awarded | Teacher |
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Apr 13 |
answered | Assign Java syntax to Blackberry tag |
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Apr 13 |
comment |
Assign Java syntax to Blackberry tag @Telthien, those of us who actively participate in the blackberry tag (none of whom have yet to comment on this question), specifically steer people away from using the java tag, because whenever you do that, a bunch of standard Java people jump in and offer solutions, completely oblivious to the fact that most modern Java APIs are not available on BlackBerry Java (which is 1.3, for the most part). Even tagging with java-me isn't perfect, although most of us consider that vastly better than tagging with java. |
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Mar 12 |
comment |
Did SO become too conservative? ... Then, there's the issue of getting questions closed (which my sole Meta question was). Sorry, but this community isn't remotely open to constructive criticism. In either software development, or real democracy, those are overwhelmingly seen as bad things. Not here, apparently. |
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Mar 12 |
comment |
Did SO become too conservative? If I understand the system correctly, asking questions and getting down voted (past some threshold) also causes the system to keep you from asking more questions. On Meta, people down vote questions if the question is simply a suggested change they don't agree with. This biases the community against hearing new ideas. I basically don't post questions/suggestions here, because I know my views are outside the mainstream of the core Meta audience, and I'll quickly lose the small number of points I have to down vote in the first place ... |
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Mar 12 |
comment |
Did SO become too conservative? @Pekka, uh, no. To downvote on Meta (or any SE site) requires a minimum number of points. (125 or 150 or whatever). So, basically, anyone can cast upvotes on Meta. Your argument is like saying that everyone was allowed to vote in the last US election, even if 99% could only vote for Obama. The number of people with that minimum amount of rep on Meta is a tiny fraction of the SO community, and heavily comprised of answerers. In the US, only 50% of eligible voters vote, and most people consider that terrible. (Meta) Stack Overflow is vastly worse than that. |
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Mar 10 |
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Old timer's luck vs Newcomer's work I think Jeff Atwood would agree that the competition aspect was added, to capitalize on human nature, and provide a way to increase collaboration (which is what a free public Q+A site is). The goal should be collaboration, but competition I think is a healthy way to achieve that. |
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Mar 10 |
comment |
Did SO become too conservative? I strongly disagree with your statement about the removal of users' accept rates. It was discussed many months ago. A few people voted on the question. The Meta SO community, in general, is a tiny subset of the SO community, and it's not a representative sample, by any means. The change was made, and all of a sudden, a bunch of us noticed, "where did the accept rate go?". You can argue whether the change was good or not (I vote "not"), but to imply that it was a remotely democratic process is wrong. |
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Mar 5 |
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Why can't I find an explanation of why my answer was deleted? -1. There's a difference between an answer being deleted because the link has already rotted, and one deleted preemptively. Deleting answers with links before the links go bad is ridiculous. The internet is made of links. That ship has sailed. An answer with a link, and a summary may be best, but an answer with only a link is still better than no answer, which is what's left after deletion (for users < 10k). |
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Feb 8 |
comment |
Is it possible to know how many competing answers I did upvote? both query links broken |
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Feb 5 |
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Should Community Moderators be “elected for life”, or have terms? @Benjol, maybe you were just trying to be funny, but that comment seems to me to be pretty indicative of the problem with many in the moderator (or wanting to someday be moderator) community. For one, on multiple occasions, the actions of moderators that I found to be unprofessional, or indicative of abuse of power, have been removed (like a disagreement over closing a question ... question and comments get deleted). Or maybe I just can't see them because I haven't hit 10k. Either way, I can't link to them, and yes, they did happen. |
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Jan 27 |
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Suggest Stack Overflow users with zero accept rates to accept some answers This completely misses the point that accepting an answer is positive feedback that I'm the one with the problem, and this solution worked for me. That is extremely important. The person asking the question should get an extra vote that identifies which answer really worked. Being able to see accepted answers at a glance also tells people browsing questions which ones still need solutions, and which ones already have answers that acceptably solved the problem. So, having askers take the (very little) trouble to accept answers is absolutely important for the site as a whole. |
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Jan 27 |
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Let's stop displaying a user's accept rate The concept of a rep whore is ridiculous. A whore is considered undesirable because they are breaking a law, and doing something many consider unsafe and socially damaging, for monetary reward. There is no money here. Badges and reputation and the like are merely ways to make this fun. It's using game theory in a way that's proven effective, over and over again. People who try to get badges, or points, are doing exactly what the system is designed to do. Not illegal. Not for money. Not unsavory, unless you consider helping other people with their work for free to be a bad thing. |
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Jan 26 |
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Is it appropriate to comment on people's accept rate? The statement The user already knows they have a low accept rate is just flat-out wrong. I constantly remind people about their accept rate, and get the replies "how do I do that?", or "ok, fixed". With such a large percentage of questions on SO asked by beginners (to the site), this feedback can be entirely constructive. |