| bio | website | blog.somewhatabstract.com |
|---|---|---|
| location | Ann Arbor, MI | |
| age | 36 | |
| visits | member for | 3 years, 10 months |
| seen | Mar 19 at 19:40 | |
| stats | profile views | 190 |
I'm an Englishman.
I primarily work within the C family of languages (mostly C# at the moment).
I am also secretary for the Ann Arbor .NET Developers Group.
In my spare time, I love to write (songs, short stories, novels, scripts) though I am unpublished. I also like to game, sing and play my guitar (not necessarily at the same time).
|
Aug 12 |
comment |
Platinum Badges @bobobobo: The question is fine. It's goal is not. Better to retain the discussion than stifle it. |
|
Jul 11 |
awarded | Nice Question |
|
Jul 9 |
awarded | Guru |
|
Jun 27 |
awarded | Yearling |
|
Feb 23 |
comment |
The problem with noobs and reputation points @gideon: If you make your goal providing high quality answers, the rest will follow. |
|
Nov 7 |
comment |
Better Favourites Organisation At the time, yes, nothing was done. |
|
Nov 7 |
comment |
Better Favourites Organisation @JonH: When this question was originally asked over 2 years ago, this was the most popular answer so I accepted it. |
|
Sep 23 |
awarded | Good Answer |
|
Jul 7 |
awarded | Nice Answer |
|
Jul 7 |
awarded | Nice Answer |
|
Jul 7 |
awarded | Nice Answer |
|
Jul 7 |
awarded | Good Answer |
|
Jun 28 |
awarded | Yearling |
|
Jun 9 |
comment |
Should moderators enforce NDAs for software vendors? @Adam: Where does the liability lie if someone edits a post to add or remove NDA information? What if you do the edit before you find out it was NDA? Are we setting ourselves up for legal action by editing a post, even if we're ignorant of the NDA that the OP or some other editor violated? |
|
May 28 |
awarded | Good Answer |
|
May 20 |
comment |
How can we deter users from prompting question-askers to improve their accept rate? @John: I conceded in the comments to the accepted answer that if the comment were constructive, I could see value. I find it rude that people just state "improve accept rate" or "accept more answers". It's almost lazy. Whereas a comment that attempts to inform the non-accepter of how to behave better is valuable - it educates rather than just complains. I'd rather none of these comments at all, but I can see compromise. |
|
May 20 |
comment |
How can we deter users from prompting question-askers to improve their accept rate? @JOn: Sample of one. Not a valid sample set. I think the comments should be constructive, as outlined in the accepted answer above. One might argue that the comment "ten questions, zero answers accepted" is more informative than the comments I originally complained about such as "improve accept rate", which is far my cryptic. |
|
May 20 |
comment |
How can we deter users from prompting question-askers to improve their accept rate? @Jon: I think we'll have to disagree. When in our personal sphere or influence, it's up to us, but there has to be consistency in a public forum such as Stack Overflow or no one will know what to do. People come to find answers - denying them that with a terse "do this" and no explanation of why or where is a little disingenuous - dare I say, divisive. |
|
May 19 |
accepted | How can we deter users from prompting question-askers to improve their accept rate? |
|
May 19 |
comment |
How can we deter users from prompting question-askers to improve their accept rate? @John: The onus is on those that know to coach, not those that don't know to find out. |