| bio | website | |
|---|---|---|
| location | Palm Bay, FL | |
| age | ||
| visits | member for | 3 years, 11 months |
| seen | 2 hours ago | |
| stats | profile views | 2,053 |
Stack Exchange Valued Associate #00005
I am the Director of Community Development for the Stack Exchange Network.
I can be reached at
rcartaino@stackexchange.com
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Apr 25 |
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What should have happened to make Arduino.SE a real SE site? I don't know that this was necessarily part of any screw up on anyone's part. This is all part of a process; a vetting of ideas. You work your way through the phases to see how far the idea can go. It's just that this particular idea wasn't meant to be. It got further than most. |
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Apr 15 |
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Too many linux sites Unix and Ubuntu: Why Both? |
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Apr 3 |
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Open Source Advertising - Sidebar - 1H 2013 @Telthien If the source code is not freely and openly available for redistribution, that would be outside the philosophy of the open source movement for which this promotion is designed. Good luck on your project, but I'm afraid your submission would not be appropriate for this promotion. |
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Jan 15 |
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When should I vote to delete? @Manishearth I don't know the technical merits of the claims, but coordinating some sort of broad review or cleanup sounds like a reasonable use of meta. |
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Jan 15 |
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When should I vote to delete? @Manishearth Wiki-style editing is designed to improve answers and keep them relevant. Comments can be used to point out changing conditions and request updates. Voting helps make sure the most relevant answers stay near the top. Failing all those mechanisms, an egregiously deteriorated post can be pointed out in meta or through moderator flags, but it should be exceedingly rare to use these mechanisms to point out technical inaccuracies. |
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Jan 12 |
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We're rolling out a new “Quick Start” guide to help new users learn the basics @benisuǝqbackwards I'm actually all for helpful tool tips or popups to avoid UI confusion, but the crux of this suggestion is to turn this simplified getting-started guide into an interactive simulation that would <quote> "show how the examples would react when you ... vote, favorite, accept, tag, edit posts, etc." You'd be surprise how many people stumble into these things and try and answer example questions ... and become absolutely indignant when the system doesn't, ahem... work. |
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Jan 12 |
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Ignore votes on answers deleted by moderators when checking for serial down-voting @gnat But you are cherry-picking a case where the aberrant voting patterns should be deemed 'okay' as long as it gets the results you want. That's like saying that illegal search and seizures are okay if it turns out that you found something criminal. Perhaps a flawed analogy, but you don't get to "abuse" the voting system because you deem that someone deserves it. How do we even explain that you can't vote for specific users... except when you can? The ends simply do not justify the means. |
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Jan 11 |
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We're rolling out a new “Quick Start” guide to help new users learn the basics @benisuǝqbackwards Yikes. That's a lot of info and learning-curve crammed in up front. A new user isn't as "conditioned" as to what to click on... and why. So, to make it a functional part of the first-time user experience, we'd have to add a lot of prompts and explanation to describe everything that can happen in that interface. That's not the purpose of that page, and faking some sort of actual functionality would be confusing. Just-in-time learning is about learning about this stuff when they really need it on the site itself... when it counts — not cramming it all into one page. |
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Jan 11 |
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Open Source Advertising - Sidebar - 1H 2013 @amanaPlanaCAnalPAnaMA Same project, good. Same ad, bad. Users can post ads for the same projects, but we want to keep the content fresh; so we ask that users do not simply resubmit the same ads over and over. |
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Dec 6 |
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Handling Calls to Remove a Moderator @PopularDemand "Be nice" is the driving maxim here, I guess it's all in the context. When publicly airing a personal matter, it can be perceived as a public flogging perhaps better handled privately. That's why we have email. But a well-thought-out, constructive criticism about a larger issue should be received in the spirit intended, and I don't necessarily see it being a problem in meta if it can be done in a civil manner. I always say our comments should be to inform and educate, not to rebuke or chastise. That works from user-to-moderator, too. I don't have a larger vision than that. |
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Dec 6 |
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Handling Calls to Remove a Moderator To be fair, this discussion was raised specifically in the context of something we (admittedly) don't see much in actual practice. But the discussion sets the framework for how we handle a "call to action" when they do come up. There's an problem with moderator-for-life when there isn't a mechanism to check that authority. We needed this discussion to bring transparency to the process. Users still have meta and a public email address to air issues. It's not overwrought with process, but I think it is quite adequate to handle "numerous, substantiated complaints from users on the site." |
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Oct 26 |
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Viewing more 'Questions per Page' jumps to non-existent pages (“page not found”) @Shog9 Perhaps... if that's the way it (just happens) to work out. But every pagination routine I've ever written said "start with item [X] and show 15." Switching it to 50 means simply "start with item [X] and show 50." Typically you don't want to stay on the same literal page number and show whatever happens fall there. Think about changing the page size in your word processor. You don't suddenly see a different part of the document because you are viewing page 15. It just "re-pages" the same bit of text you are looking at. (Wasn't planning on getting into a design discussion) |
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Oct 26 |
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Viewing more 'Questions per Page' jumps to non-existent pages (“page not found”) Hmm... That may be missing the point. I don't think most users want to view page 259273, literally. They're looking at a list of questions. The normal use case is to show the same list of questions, only longer. |
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Oct 17 |
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Handling Calls to Remove a Moderator @BenBrocka I'm not envisioning a system where single complaints be made public. I'm talking about a system of escalation when there is a clear pattern of continuous, unresolved problems; a "vote of no confidence" <--whatever that means in this context. How can we set up a system where ongoing calls to handle a bad situation are handled in a way that is fair to everyone involved, and not subject to arbitrary enforcement. It doesn't necessarily have to be public, but it has to be a process of vetting that is consistently enforced and not triggered based on how loudly the parties complain. |
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Oct 16 |
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The vote fraud script breaks legitimate polling questions - A serial downvoter's lament @JeffAtwood That's a great idea and frankly better than all the hack-y workarounds we've considered to date. |
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Oct 11 |
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Keeping dead beta sites as “archive sites” @Ephraim There's still a trust issue of providing unmaintained content... and users following links leading into impassable dead-end walls. At some point, it just seems like a bad idea and time to move on. |
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Oct 11 |
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Keeping dead beta sites as “archive sites” @ShaWizDowArd The idea itself has merit. I just believe the downsides far outweigh the benefit. It was Area 51 for 5 months, but only moved here for discussion (as of now) 50 minutes ago. |
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Oct 11 |
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Keeping dead beta sites as “archive sites” @ShaWizDowArd I'm just adding my thoughts to the conversation. I'm not issuing a decree... and the conversation has only been here for 15 minutes. |
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Oct 8 |
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Why must a user have 50 points to enter a comment ...and not just spam. The reputation requirement simply says that we'd like you to use and learn about the system a bit before going beyond the basic functionality (asking and answering questions). The comment system is easily misunderstood. Internet folks most commonly see comments as a way to type whatever comes into their heads (answers, other questions, related discussions, random chat, etc). Comments on Stack Exchange have a very specific purpose so the minimal rep requirement is an easy way to say, "use the site a bit to see how it works." |
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Sep 12 |
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Using Stack Overflow for StockTwits's developer community @BilltheLizard No, the author isn't talking about anything like the Facebook deal. This sounds more like the organic support Stack Overflow provides to any group of developers like what Jon Skeet is talking about here: meta.stackoverflow.com/a/3974/98786. |