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replaced http://stackoverflow.com/ with https://stackoverflow.com/
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Here's something else to consider (you can kinda get this off of SEDE, but since it doesn't include deleted stuff the trend is skewed):

PHP questions by month

That's just the number of PHP questions asked each month on Stack Overflow, with April as the last month. Think about that a little bit...

  • If I'm a dedicated PHP answerer, and I check http://stackoverflow.com/tags/phphttps://stackoverflow.com/tags/php once every hour for 8 hours a day and at least scan every question on the page (set to 50 questions per page) when I do... Then I'm viewing something like 12K questions a month.

  • I'm only viewing half of all the questions asked, and that 50% isn't a representative sample, because question volume - and quality - varies throughout the day.

  • And 90% of everything is crap.

...then you can probably start to see how I might have become convinced that there are no good questions asked anymore. If I don't have time to scan 400 questions every day, there's even less chance I'm seeing the good ones before they get buried.

And this is why, as important as moderation is, it's absolutely worthless for solving the "too many bad questions" problem: there are simply too many questions!

The trick here is gonna have to be either magic filtering or some sort of system that silently deemphasizes questions that don't deserve much attention (imagine what would happen if a couple of downvotes dropped a question off of the newest questions page after a few minutes?)

Because otherwise, no matter how much we do to clean up, there's still going to be a better chance of someone logging on and seeing crap than of seeing anything else.

Here's something else to consider (you can kinda get this off of SEDE, but since it doesn't include deleted stuff the trend is skewed):

PHP questions by month

That's just the number of PHP questions asked each month on Stack Overflow, with April as the last month. Think about that a little bit...

  • If I'm a dedicated PHP answerer, and I check http://stackoverflow.com/tags/php once every hour for 8 hours a day and at least scan every question on the page (set to 50 questions per page) when I do... Then I'm viewing something like 12K questions a month.

  • I'm only viewing half of all the questions asked, and that 50% isn't a representative sample, because question volume - and quality - varies throughout the day.

  • And 90% of everything is crap.

...then you can probably start to see how I might have become convinced that there are no good questions asked anymore. If I don't have time to scan 400 questions every day, there's even less chance I'm seeing the good ones before they get buried.

And this is why, as important as moderation is, it's absolutely worthless for solving the "too many bad questions" problem: there are simply too many questions!

The trick here is gonna have to be either magic filtering or some sort of system that silently deemphasizes questions that don't deserve much attention (imagine what would happen if a couple of downvotes dropped a question off of the newest questions page after a few minutes?)

Because otherwise, no matter how much we do to clean up, there's still going to be a better chance of someone logging on and seeing crap than of seeing anything else.

Here's something else to consider (you can kinda get this off of SEDE, but since it doesn't include deleted stuff the trend is skewed):

PHP questions by month

That's just the number of PHP questions asked each month on Stack Overflow, with April as the last month. Think about that a little bit...

  • If I'm a dedicated PHP answerer, and I check https://stackoverflow.com/tags/php once every hour for 8 hours a day and at least scan every question on the page (set to 50 questions per page) when I do... Then I'm viewing something like 12K questions a month.

  • I'm only viewing half of all the questions asked, and that 50% isn't a representative sample, because question volume - and quality - varies throughout the day.

  • And 90% of everything is crap.

...then you can probably start to see how I might have become convinced that there are no good questions asked anymore. If I don't have time to scan 400 questions every day, there's even less chance I'm seeing the good ones before they get buried.

And this is why, as important as moderation is, it's absolutely worthless for solving the "too many bad questions" problem: there are simply too many questions!

The trick here is gonna have to be either magic filtering or some sort of system that silently deemphasizes questions that don't deserve much attention (imagine what would happen if a couple of downvotes dropped a question off of the newest questions page after a few minutes?)

Because otherwise, no matter how much we do to clean up, there's still going to be a better chance of someone logging on and seeing crap than of seeing anything else.

replaced http://meta.stackoverflow.com/ with https://meta.stackoverflow.com/
Source Link

Here's something else to consider (you can kinda get this off of SEDE, but since it doesn't include deleted stuff the trend is skewed):

PHP questions by monthPHP questions by month

That's just the number of PHP questions asked each month on Stack Overflow, with April as the last month. Think about that a little bit...

  • If I'm a dedicated PHP answerer, and I check http://stackoverflow.com/tags/php once every hour for 8 hours a day and at least scan every question on the page (set to 50 questions per page) when I do... Then I'm viewing something like 12K questions a month.

  • I'm only viewing half of all the questions asked, and that 50% isn't a representative sample, because question volume - and quality - varies throughout the day.

  • And 90% of everything is crap.

...then you can probably start to see how I might have become convinced that there are no good questions asked anymore. If I don't have time to scan 400 questions every day, there's even less chance I'm seeing the good ones before they get buried.

And this is why, as important as moderation is, it's absolutely worthless for solving the "too many bad questions" problem: there are simply too many questions!

The trick here is gonna have to be either magic filteringmagic filtering or some sort of system that silently deemphasizes questions that don't deserve much attention (imagine what would happen if a couple of downvotes dropped a question off of the newest questions page after a few minutes?)

Because otherwise, no matter how much we do to clean up, there's still going to be a better chance of someone logging on and seeing crap than of seeing anything else.

Here's something else to consider (you can kinda get this off of SEDE, but since it doesn't include deleted stuff the trend is skewed):

PHP questions by month

That's just the number of PHP questions asked each month on Stack Overflow, with April as the last month. Think about that a little bit...

  • If I'm a dedicated PHP answerer, and I check http://stackoverflow.com/tags/php once every hour for 8 hours a day and at least scan every question on the page (set to 50 questions per page) when I do... Then I'm viewing something like 12K questions a month.

  • I'm only viewing half of all the questions asked, and that 50% isn't a representative sample, because question volume - and quality - varies throughout the day.

  • And 90% of everything is crap.

...then you can probably start to see how I might have become convinced that there are no good questions asked anymore. If I don't have time to scan 400 questions every day, there's even less chance I'm seeing the good ones before they get buried.

And this is why, as important as moderation is, it's absolutely worthless for solving the "too many bad questions" problem: there are simply too many questions!

The trick here is gonna have to be either magic filtering or some sort of system that silently deemphasizes questions that don't deserve much attention (imagine what would happen if a couple of downvotes dropped a question off of the newest questions page after a few minutes?)

Because otherwise, no matter how much we do to clean up, there's still going to be a better chance of someone logging on and seeing crap than of seeing anything else.

Here's something else to consider (you can kinda get this off of SEDE, but since it doesn't include deleted stuff the trend is skewed):

PHP questions by month

That's just the number of PHP questions asked each month on Stack Overflow, with April as the last month. Think about that a little bit...

  • If I'm a dedicated PHP answerer, and I check http://stackoverflow.com/tags/php once every hour for 8 hours a day and at least scan every question on the page (set to 50 questions per page) when I do... Then I'm viewing something like 12K questions a month.

  • I'm only viewing half of all the questions asked, and that 50% isn't a representative sample, because question volume - and quality - varies throughout the day.

  • And 90% of everything is crap.

...then you can probably start to see how I might have become convinced that there are no good questions asked anymore. If I don't have time to scan 400 questions every day, there's even less chance I'm seeing the good ones before they get buried.

And this is why, as important as moderation is, it's absolutely worthless for solving the "too many bad questions" problem: there are simply too many questions!

The trick here is gonna have to be either magic filtering or some sort of system that silently deemphasizes questions that don't deserve much attention (imagine what would happen if a couple of downvotes dropped a question off of the newest questions page after a few minutes?)

Because otherwise, no matter how much we do to clean up, there's still going to be a better chance of someone logging on and seeing crap than of seeing anything else.

If I had a nickel for every time I got distracted and started re-writing the same sentence again without deleting the last revision...
Source Link
Shog9
  • 159.4k
  • 177
  • 1.2k
  • 1.2k

Here's something else to consider (you can kinda get this off of SEDE, but since it doesn't include deleted stuff the trend is skewed):

PHP questions by month

That's just the number of PHP questions asked each month on Stack Overflow, with April as the last month. Think about that a little bit...

  • If I'm a dedicated PHP answerer, and I check http://stackoverflow.com/tags/php once every hour for 8 hours a day and at least scan every question on the page (set to 50 questions per page) when I do... Then I'm viewing something like 12K questions a month.

  • I'm only viewing half of all the questions asked.

  • And, and that 50% of what I'm viewing isn't a representative sample, because question volume - and quality - varies throughout the day.

  • And 90% of everything is crap.

...then you can probably start to see how I might have become convinced that there are no good questions asked anymore. If I don't have time to scan 400 questions every day, there's even less chance I'm seeing the good ones before they get buried.

And this is why, as important as moderation is, it's absolutely worthless for solving the "too many bad questions" problem: there are simply too many questions!

The trick here is gonna have to be either magic filtering or some sort of system that silently deemphasizes questions that don't deserve much attention (imagine what would happen if a couple of downvotes dropped a question off of the newest questions page after a few minutes?)

Because otherwise, no matter how much we do to clean up, there's still going to be a better chance of someone logging on and seeing crap than of seeing anything else.

Here's something else to consider (you can kinda get this off of SEDE, but since it doesn't include deleted stuff the trend is skewed):

PHP questions by month

That's just the number of PHP questions asked each month on Stack Overflow, with April as the last month. Think about that a little bit...

  • If I'm a dedicated PHP answerer, and I check http://stackoverflow.com/tags/php once every hour for 8 hours a day and at least scan every question on the page (set to 50 questions per page) when I do... Then I'm viewing something like 12K questions a month.

  • I'm only viewing half of all the questions asked.

  • And that 50% of what I'm viewing isn't a representative sample, because question volume - and quality - varies throughout the day.

  • And 90% of everything is crap.

...then you can probably start to see how I might have become convinced that there are no good questions asked anymore. If I don't have time to scan 400 questions every day, there's even less chance I'm seeing the good ones before they get buried.

And this is why, as important as moderation is, it's absolutely worthless for solving the "too many bad questions" problem: there are simply too many questions!

The trick here is gonna have to be either magic filtering or some sort of system that silently deemphasizes questions that don't deserve much attention (imagine what would happen if a couple of downvotes dropped a question off of the newest questions page after a few minutes?)

Because otherwise, no matter how much we do to clean up, there's still going to be a better chance of someone logging on and seeing crap than of seeing anything else.

Here's something else to consider (you can kinda get this off of SEDE, but since it doesn't include deleted stuff the trend is skewed):

PHP questions by month

That's just the number of PHP questions asked each month on Stack Overflow, with April as the last month. Think about that a little bit...

  • If I'm a dedicated PHP answerer, and I check http://stackoverflow.com/tags/php once every hour for 8 hours a day and at least scan every question on the page (set to 50 questions per page) when I do... Then I'm viewing something like 12K questions a month.

  • I'm only viewing half of all the questions asked, and that 50% isn't a representative sample, because question volume - and quality - varies throughout the day.

  • And 90% of everything is crap.

...then you can probably start to see how I might have become convinced that there are no good questions asked anymore. If I don't have time to scan 400 questions every day, there's even less chance I'm seeing the good ones before they get buried.

And this is why, as important as moderation is, it's absolutely worthless for solving the "too many bad questions" problem: there are simply too many questions!

The trick here is gonna have to be either magic filtering or some sort of system that silently deemphasizes questions that don't deserve much attention (imagine what would happen if a couple of downvotes dropped a question off of the newest questions page after a few minutes?)

Because otherwise, no matter how much we do to clean up, there's still going to be a better chance of someone logging on and seeing crap than of seeing anything else.

Source Link
Shog9
  • 159.4k
  • 177
  • 1.2k
  • 1.2k
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