223 reputation
18
bio website jonathonwatney.com
location Victoria, Canada
age 35
visits member for 3 years, 11 months
seen Nov 14 '12 at 19:52
stats profile views 22

Web developer, a lot of end-to-end stuff.

twitter.com/jonathonwatney


Oct
22
awarded  Nice Question
Jan
27
awarded  Autobiographer
Jun
28
awarded  Yearling
Feb
16
comment Partner with “traditional” forums to support open ended discussions
@Tony_Henrich, Was that directed at my comment? If it was, what I'm trying to say is I think the typical forum UI doesn't present threaded discussion very well when you start having long running discussions where each reply has many replies, i.e. the indenting can make things squished. And flattened replies never work so well either, even with proper quoting. Reply organization would have to be better.
Feb
16
comment Partner with “traditional” forums to support open ended discussions
@Tony_Henrich, Of course! The "call the forum api to create a new topic" being key.
Feb
5
comment Partner with “traditional” forums to support open ended discussions
@tucson I'm thinking that threaded discussion doesn't scale because the current UI does a poor job of accommodating the extreme, or more precisely, the UI does a poor job when approaching the extreme. Maybe creating a killer UI for threaded discussion is next to impossible on the web or in the very least, complicated. As far as opening as many questions as you need, yeah, in theory that works. But in practice open ended questions will be closed. Now where do you discuss those topics with the same community?
Feb
5
comment Partner with “traditional” forums to support open ended discussions
@tucson But the Q&A format is for Q&A, not discussions. Comments that want to be a discussion may not translate well into the Q&A format, and as a result be closed. As far as structuring discussions, especially threaded discussions, I'm vaguely reminded of a Steve Yegge blog where he says the current state of threaded discussion UI is horrible and that there has to be a better way. I think SO does it's very well for the Q&As but perhaps threaded discussion only works with a committed community and Steve's UI is a pipe dream.
Feb
5
comment Partner with “traditional” forums to support open ended discussions
Just to be clear, I'm not supporting free-form discussions in general, just those that arise out of questions that have already been asked. That is discussions are always related to a question or even an answer.
Feb
5
revised Partner with “traditional” forums to support open ended discussions
added 266 characters in body
Feb
5
comment Partner with “traditional” forums to support open ended discussions
@Tony_Henrich Having the forum stay inside SO's realm would certainly allow for tighter integration but development time for that would be much, much longer. I think if SO were to undertake this even as a limited experiment then cooperation from an outside forum would be key. They could at least see if it would be useful without a doing a ton of development work.
Feb
5
comment Partner with “traditional” forums to support open ended discussions
@Perpetual Motion Goat Ha! Thanks. I figure if I get the down votes it means it's just an unpopular idea. :/
Feb
5
comment Partner with “traditional” forums to support open ended discussions
@Paul "professional programming discussion board." Nice way to put it. I like it.
Feb
5
comment Partner with “traditional” forums to support open ended discussions
@John Smithers "It's a trap!" ;)
Feb
4
comment Partner with “traditional” forums to support open ended discussions
@Robert "The very existence of Stack Overflow is based on the premise that these threaded systems don't work." ... for Q&A. ;) Besides, the group can be it's own worst enemy off-site. The discussion would be related to SO but not a part of it. I think the key would be finding the correct forum(s). A community like that of Hacker News could yield some pretty good discussions, I think.
Feb
4
comment Partner with “traditional” forums to support open ended discussions
I agree. There probably isn't much use for it seeing as the number of discussions that would come up be a low percentage of total questions asked. I may have to agree on the distraction part as well but I bet it could be done effectively.
Feb
4
comment Partner with “traditional” forums to support open ended discussions
@pi The point of SO wouldn't change. It would still be here to serve as a Q&A site. But if a full scale discussion is in order then that can take place off-site. In other words, they can go off topic somewhere else and SO would be any worse off. I'm just suggesting a method that makes this a little more formal than popping a forum link in a comment.
Feb
4
comment Partner with “traditional” forums to support open ended discussions
I understood that discussions were frowned upon on SO though. At least that's the idea I get from the various SO podcasts and some of the moderation behavior I've seen. So perhaps supporting actually discussion elsewhere would be beneficial. And you're probably correct, fragmentation will happen but the parts would be Q&A on one side and discussion on the other, granted with some people lost in between.
Feb
4
awarded  Commentator
Feb
4
comment Partner with “traditional” forums to support open ended discussions
Why indeed. :) Upon thinking about it further, yeah, this sort of thing may not be Stack Overflow's concern. Why should SO officially support something like this? Because it would probably scratch an itch that more than a few people have. Some of the comments prompted me to pose this question: blog.stackoverflow.com/2010/02/stack-exchange-gets-a-blog/… It certainly doesn't justify implementing it though. I'd much rather see a query API before something like this. :)
Feb
4
asked Partner with “traditional” forums to support open ended discussions