3,567 reputation
1329
bio website embeddedrelated.com/blogs-1/…
location Arizona
age
visits member for 3 years, 10 months
seen Feb 8 at 20:20
stats profile views 397

Sep
1
comment Launch new sites from Area 51 through an active siphon pool
how can you make that prediction without testing it?
Sep
1
comment Launch new sites from Area 51 through an active siphon pool
+1 because the only real way to generate interest from newcomers is to get them asking questions. Not generating potential interest in a potential site to be launched from scratch. Getting people to sign up for area51 is like pulling teeth. I don't understand why so many people -1'd this proposal. It makes sense.
Sep
1
asked why area51 is doing it wrong
Jul
22
comment Why doesn't Meta Stack Overflow have a Meta?
why wouldn't meta about meta just go here?
Jul
21
revised provide documentation to clarify @user-syntax-denied in comments
deleted 677 characters in body
Jul
21
comment provide documentation to clarify @user-syntax-denied in comments
@Cody -- TJ Crowder just pointed out, as you did that this is already in the "help" link. That's fair, but when you get a confusing message that pops up and stops you from doing something, there should be a link to that documentation as well.
Jul
21
comment Tell the user who will be notified of a comment
ok, then perhaps the text "will receive notifications in this comment" in your example should be the link. That way it doesn't take up more room. As for the help link, you have a point -- I just tried it -- but I've never noticed it before, despite using SO for over 2 years.
Jul
21
revised provide documentation to clarify @user-syntax-denied in comments
added 129 characters in body
Jul
21
comment provide documentation to clarify @user-syntax-denied in comments
@Neal -- my point is to ask for documentation, not to complain about the behavior. I'll edit my question.
Jul
21
comment provide documentation to clarify @user-syntax-denied in comments
@Cody -- ok, you have a point about the tone. And yes, I did check that question.
Jul
21
comment provide documentation to clarify @user-syntax-denied in comments
...and it's also different behavior: the past discussion has been about the @user part of the comments being removed. This is behavior that prevents the comment from being posted.
Jul
21
comment provide documentation to clarify @user-syntax-denied in comments
This isn't a duplicate! I'm not trying to complain about the behavior (at least not directly), I'm trying to state that there should be a way to steer users toward an explanation of what is going on.
Jul
21
answered Tell the user who will be notified of a comment
Jul
21
revised provide documentation to clarify @user-syntax-denied in comments
added 185 characters in body
Jul
21
asked provide documentation to clarify @user-syntax-denied in comments
Jul
21
comment Don't remove the @ part of my comment
@$#%@$#%@$%#@%!!!!! I just got a popup saying "Only one additional @user can be notified; the post owner will always be notified" thus denying me the right to use the literal @user syntax more than once in the comment even though I was using it in its literal and non-automatic form. You guys REALLY need to take your best shot at a simple, easy-to-understand webpage, and if you really feel the need to deny people posting a particular syntax, include a link to that webpage on the popup box so someone can actually understand what it is they're not supposed to do.
Jul
21
comment Don't remove the @ part of my comment
@Jeff: I get your point, but it's nearly 100% confusing to anyone who hasn't read this webpage carefully. What you mean is essentially the following: that most of the time @user: syntax is appropriate, except in this one case of answerer + one commenter, where the commenter can't add the "@user:" syntax but the answerer can. How is a new user, who may be familiar with Twitter and Facebook and other social media where @user is the norm for addressing someone else, regardless of whether it has any automated effect, supposed to understand these rules?
Jul
15
awarded  Good Answer
Jul
15
awarded  Pundit
Jul
9
comment Don't remove the @ part of my comment
@Shog9: point taken. Not that you've changed my mind, but I get where you're coming from. Aside from the system-annotation aspect of it, what would be the best syntax to clearly address users named "the" and "chaos" and "PC" and "if"? (not asking rhetorically, asking with sincerity)