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Apr 23, 2014 at 21:34 history migrated from meta.stackexchange.com (revisions)
Sep 27, 2013 at 7:57 comment added Your Common Sense @KubaOber You have lost the essential part. Indeed I think there can't be so many of them every day. The supply in general is indeed an infinite one. But I am talking of the rates.
Sep 27, 2013 at 6:31 comment added Peter Alfvin @YourCommonSense Rather than arguing whether most question are duplicates, why don't we agree that the vast percentage are either "unique to the asker" (e.g. based on their specific code) or duplicate? As long as we agree that they both fall into the category that we don't want to retain them, we can focus on other things.
Sep 26, 2013 at 17:04 comment added Servy Related link to Kuba's last comment
Sep 26, 2013 at 17:02 comment added Kuba Ober @YourCommonSense: "It's just impossible to have thousands unique programming questions every day." I think it's akin to the perhaps common (mis)belief that there's very many English sentences that repeat everywhere. Quite to the contrary, there's a relatively insignificant fraction of the overall number of English sentences that are ever written more than once. Same applies to programming questions: you'd think there can't be so many of them, but yet, there are. Just as there's infinite supply of typo questions, there's infinite supply of the other reasonable ones as well.
Sep 26, 2013 at 17:02 comment added Adam Rackis I guess I'm the only person that doesn't see a problem. Time and again when I google something, I see SO at the top of the results, with outstanding answers. Whenever I ask a question, I get no shortage of awesome answers. And when I have the time to answer questions, I hang out at the new questions page for my stronger areas, like JavaScript and jQuery, and seldom have difficulty hitting the rep cap.
Sep 26, 2013 at 9:52 comment added Your Common Sense @TimPost not sure of whom you are talking about, but speaking of me, I am rather after the, so to say, "run-time" questions, seeing them in progress. I happen to dwell in several second-rate tags only, and I see the questions coming in continuous progress, not in random spots. What I see is an endless current of either duplicated or too localized questions that gets answered, and some real good questions that require either special knowledge or certain experience or time spent investigating the problem - and these latter questions often get no proper answer at all.
Sep 25, 2013 at 16:21 comment added user50049 To be clear, what he's talking about are questions that you metaphorically trip over through searching until you find the one that actually helps. That's not to say that these very 'me' specific questions won't ever be useful to someone, but they can and do get in the way of finding more helpful content, at least in certain tags (think PHP / Android / IOS). It's something I've been thinking about for a while, as have the folks that curate the PHP tag.
Sep 25, 2013 at 16:18 comment added user50049 @YourCommonSense You've definitely given me something to think about. I want to dig into the anonymous feedback that we receive before I write a proper answer here. Thanks again for finally getting this down into words, it's good to see you here.
Sep 25, 2013 at 14:43 comment added Your Common Sense @TimPost +15 from the OP for spotting the typo is more than you can offer and takes much less trouble. As long as current status quo remains, questions will be answered, not flagged. However, I am talking not of the existing tools like voting or review tools but of something different. I am for answering any question. But after getting answer it have to be judged by the community for one simple criterion: if this question will be helpful for someone else or not. if not - it have to be taken away.
Sep 25, 2013 at 14:34 comment added user50049 @YourCommonSense We do have the bounty that you speak of via /review, and we're actively looking at how we can put more relevant questions for closure and quality checking in front of people based on their tags, without it being too expensive performance-wise. While this was quite a rant, you do bring up interesting problems that are very difficult to deal with.
Sep 25, 2013 at 14:30 comment added Your Common Sense @Servy I have to agree, to some degree. Indeed some of them are of too localized kind too. I was answering to the particular comment above, speaking of duplicated questions in particular.
Sep 25, 2013 at 14:26 comment added Servy @YourCommonSense No, it's not impossible to have thousands of unique questions ever day. Many of them may be of low quality, but not all low quality questions are duplicates. I also strongly disagree that 99% would be duplicates. There are plenty, sure, but not nearly that many.
Sep 25, 2013 at 14:16 comment added Oded StaffMod @JanDvorak - I worry that this would create more problems than it would solve.
Sep 25, 2013 at 14:15 comment added Your Common Sense I see it this way: It's just impossible to have thousands unique programming questions every day. So, 99% of questions are duplicates. Just by design. So, they have to be closed (or better wiped). It will give space for the real questions.
Sep 25, 2013 at 14:13 comment added John Dvorak @Oded Are you sure about that? I think it's worth trying.
Sep 25, 2013 at 14:12 comment added John Dvorak yeah... I like the idea of incentivizing janitory work
Sep 25, 2013 at 14:12 comment added Oded StaffMod @YourCommonSense - hordes will indeed descend on questions. But then, we will end up with the opposite issue. The zeal to find duplicates will cause closure of many questions that are not duplicates.
Sep 25, 2013 at 14:11 comment added Your Common Sense That's as simple as egg: just offer a bounty. Currently someone who decides to close a duplicate gets nothing but a headache. But as soon as you offer some small points for cleaning, hordes will be on duty. It works. I've seen many accounts with 1000s of rep gained on getting +2 from editing answers only
Sep 25, 2013 at 14:09 comment added George Stocker Mod Getting through the rant part of his question, it seems like he's saying that we're not giving enough weight to janitorial work, and giving too much weight to answering. People answer because they have incentives to, they don't clean up enough because there is no incentive to. I have no idea how to fix this either, except to head back to the 'Other' flag queue.
Sep 25, 2013 at 14:07 history answered OdedStaffMod CC BY-SA 3.0