Over the years, I've seen a lot of hullabaloo and holier-than-thou attitudes regarding the "we don't have threads here", oh not us, we're not like those uncivilized monstrosities called discussion boards. We don't have threads. We have questions and answers. They have threads, with their discussion and their banter and their threadiness of failure.
In other words, we have an initial post on a particular topic and the subsequent posts responding to that topic.
But how in the kitten-petting world is that different from a thread?
According to the Free Dictionary, a thread may be defined as:
A set of posts on a newsgroup, composed of an initial post about a topic and all responses to it.
The Jargon File has this to say on the matter:
[Usenet, GEnie, CompuServe] Common abbreviation of topic thread, a more or less continuous chain of postings on a single topic. To follow a thread is to read a series of Usenet postings sharing a common subject or (more correctly) which are connected by Reference headers. The better newsreaders can present news in thread order automatically. Not to be confused with the techspeak sense of ‘thread’, e.g. a lightweight process.
Interestingly, this is far from a neologism. The OED says: “That which connects the successive points in anything, esp. a narrative, train of thought, or the like; the sequence of events or ideas continuing throughout the whole course of anything;” Citations are given going back to 1642!
So even after 4 years and over 50,000 stackexchange rep, I'm struggling to figure out... how is (whatever the collection of posts that is a Question and its corresponding Answers is called) not a thread, and in the event there's a reasonable argument presented, what should an alternative single-word for such a collection be?