| bio | website | shog9.com |
|---|---|---|
| location | Not looking over your shoulder | |
| age | 33 | |
| visits | member for | 3 years, 10 months |
| seen | 1 hour ago | |
| stats | profile views | 8,761 |
Poke...
- Community Manager for Stack Exchange, Inc.
- Email-accessible: shog@stackoverflow.com
- Self-absorbed process wonk
- Tilting slightly to the right
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May 10 |
awarded | Good Answer |
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May 9 |
comment |
Turbocharging the Roomba: solutions for premature deletion @T.J.Crowder: canned comments on answers notify authors, even if their questions are deleted. There are no canned comments for questions... yet. Comments from moderators posted shortly before a post is deleted will notify the author, even if their questions are deleted. No other comments can be relied on to produce an inbox notification once the post is deleted. There's no "deleted" inbox notification. My comment about "days later" was simply that a closed question becomes much more likely to be deleted after a few days. |
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May 9 |
revised |
If you edit an answer, you should not be allowed to change your vote edited tags |
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May 9 |
comment |
Per-site metas no longer have an apparent way to retag That's rarely the worst retagging sin on child metas, at least in my experience. |
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May 9 |
comment |
Retagging without the edit privilege now requires an edit summary The summary is compulsory until you get full editing privileges - I don't think it's a bad habit to encourage, even if folks don't make full use of it most of the time. |
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May 9 |
answered | Retagging without the edit privilege now requires an edit summary |
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May 9 |
answered | Per-site metas no longer have an apparent way to retag |
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May 9 |
answered | Misleading banner when editing with the retag privilege but without the edit privilege |
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May 9 |
comment |
Turbocharging the Roomba: solutions for premature deletion @T.J.Crowder: can you flesh that out and post it as a separate feature-request? This is getting long... Oh, read this first: meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/133729/… |
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May 9 |
comment |
Turbocharging the Roomba: solutions for premature deletion Read jon's answer to that question. That's pretty much what we're aiming for here. |
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May 9 |
comment |
Should we eliminate the [inkscape] tag? @kyle: stackoverflow.com/posts/7738834/revisions |
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May 9 |
comment |
View *my* deleted question and answer with less than 10K You gotta have edit rights for it to work. |
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May 9 |
answered | View *my* deleted question and answer with less than 10K |
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May 9 |
revised |
View *my* deleted question and answer with less than 10K edited tags |
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May 9 |
awarded | low-quality-posts |
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May 9 |
answered | First post answer is incomplete |
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May 9 |
comment |
Is there a name for the scenario where Jon Skeet beats you to answers I think it's called "answering questions in c#" |
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May 9 |
comment |
Turbocharging the Roomba: solutions for premature deletion Of course I'm cherry-picking, @T.J.Crowder: I'd much prefer to focus on the folks who're doing something good or are willing to learn to do so. You used your own example - well, it didn't take a half-dozen deleted questions for you to figure out how to get along, did it? Or even one? The cost of the feature itself is trivial - the cost of supporting it, decidedly non-trivial... And for what benefit? For whose benefit? Not yours or anyone in your position; not even mine, although I have a far higher crap to good ratio than you do. So who does this benefit really? |
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May 8 |
comment |
Turbocharging the Roomba: solutions for premature deletion They get useful feedback. Prior to deletion. We're working on improving that feedback, but we can't do anything about folks who aren't willing to listen other than get them out of our hair. Go look in the 10K tools, at recently-deleted posts @T.J.Crowder: right now, there's a pile of questions posted by someone in the span of about an hour, all of which were closed and commented on and resulted in... Another crappy duplicate. Do you really think we should devote more development resources so that he can go back now and read the feedback he ignored the first 6 times? |
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May 8 |
comment |
Turbocharging the Roomba: solutions for premature deletion No, it's also helpful if they remember their browser keeps a history, or ask about it here on Meta, or email us. But yeah, what's the harm in giving folks a permanent list of everything bad they've ever done? At best, it's demoralizing... at worst, it generates a huge amount of angst from folks who wouldn't have bothered otherwise. There are around 700 questions deleted every day on SO, most of them crap that stands zero chance of being restored; do you really want to do that much hand-holding every day? 'Cause I sure don't. You can't save them all, @T.J.Crowder. |