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Peter Mortensen
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I'm of the opinion that S.OStack Overflow. would be much better off broken up further -- e.g. into a pythonPython board, a C++ board, etc. -- rather than structured completely via tags as "one ring to bind them all".

While there are disadvantages to that because some questions legitimately span boundaries, I think those are problems that could be resolved via more extensive migration paths, and a mechanism to facilitate limited cross-posting (with links, etc.).

One of the things I notice on S.OStack Overflow. specifically (as opposed to smaller S.E.Stack Exchange sites) is that voting seems to encourage people to answer as fast as they can, rather than as thoughtfully as they can, because the number of potential upvotes dwindles very very quickly -- I presume this is because of the number of voters who indiscriminately monitor a large number of tags and so are inclined only to review very recent questions. ByBy "very recent" and "very quickly" I mean a time scale on the order of minutes.

Smaller, separate boards would slow this down. ItIt would also allow for greater fine tuning-tuning of policy, etc., from community to community. AnAn advantage to that would be the consequences of such fine tuning-tuning could be compared and contrasted. TheThe current S.O. Meta Stack Overflow could continue to exist as a tiered/overarching community concerned with the programming boards in general.

In discussion of expanding migration paths at U&L, some members have expressed opposition explicitly, because they do not want to increase the significance of the Stack Exchange community in general. II consider this unfortunate; IMO the individual boards would be better served with a higher degree of integration -- just, not to the point of the "one ring to bind them all" board, which is where things stand currently WRT programming.

I'm of the opinion that S.O. would be much better off broken up further -- e.g. into a python board, a C++ board, etc. -- rather than structured completely via tags as "one ring to bind them all".

While there are disadvantages to that because some questions legitimately span boundaries, I think those are problems that could be resolved via more extensive migration paths, and a mechanism to facilitate limited cross-posting (with links, etc).

One of the things I notice on S.O. specifically (as opposed to smaller S.E. sites) is that voting seems to encourage people to answer as fast as they can, rather than as thoughtfully as they can, because the number of potential upvotes dwindles very very quickly -- I presume this is because of the number of voters who indiscriminately monitor a large number of tags and so are inclined only to review very recent questions. By "very recent" and "very quickly" I mean a time scale on the order of minutes.

Smaller, separate boards would slow this down. It would also allow for greater fine tuning of policy, etc., from community to community. An advantage to that would be the consequences of such fine tuning could be compared and contrasted. The current S.O. Meta could continue to exist as a tiered/overarching community concerned with the programming boards in general.

In discussion of expanding migration paths at U&L, some members have expressed opposition explicitly because they do not want to increase the significance of the Stack Exchange community in general. I consider this unfortunate; IMO the individual boards would be better served with a higher degree of integration -- just, not to the point of the "one ring to bind them all" board, which is where things stand currently WRT programming.

I'm of the opinion that Stack Overflow. would be much better off broken up further -- e.g. into a Python board, a C++ board, etc. -- rather than structured completely via tags as "one ring to bind them all".

While there are disadvantages to that because some questions legitimately span boundaries, I think those are problems that could be resolved via more extensive migration paths, and a mechanism to facilitate limited cross-posting (with links, etc.).

One of the things I notice on Stack Overflow. specifically (as opposed to smaller Stack Exchange sites) is that voting seems to encourage people to answer as fast as they can, rather than as thoughtfully as they can, because the number of potential upvotes dwindles very very quickly -- I presume this is because of the number of voters who indiscriminately monitor a large number of tags and so are inclined only to review very recent questions. By "very recent" and "very quickly" I mean a time scale on the order of minutes.

Smaller, separate boards would slow this down. It would also allow for greater fine-tuning of policy, etc., from community to community. An advantage to that would be the consequences of such fine-tuning could be compared and contrasted. The current Meta Stack Overflow could continue to exist as a tiered/overarching community concerned with the programming boards in general.

In discussion of expanding migration paths at U&L, some members have expressed opposition explicitly, because they do not want to increase the significance of the Stack Exchange community in general. I consider this unfortunate; IMO the individual boards would be better served with a higher degree of integration -- just, not to the point of the "one ring to bind them all" board, which is where things stand currently WRT programming.

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wholerabbit
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I'm of the opinion that S.O. would be much better off broken up further -- e.g. into a python board, a C++ board, etc. -- rather than structured completely via tags as "one ring to bind them all".

While there are disadvantages to that because some questions legitimately span boundaries, I think those are problems that could be resolved via more extensive migration paths, and a mechanism to facilitate limited cross-posting (with links, etc).

One of the things I notice on S.O. specifically (as opposed to smaller S.E. sites) is that voting seems to encourage people to answer as fast as they can, rather than as thoughtfully as they can, because the number of potential upvotes dwindles very very quickly -- I presume this is because of the number of voters who indiscriminately monitor a large number of tags and so are inclined only to review very recent questions. By "very recent" and "very quickly" I mean a time scale on the order of minutes.

Smaller, separate boards would slow this down. It would also allow for greater fine tuning of policy, etc., from community to community. An advantage to that would be the consequences of such fine tuning could be compared and contrasted. The current S.O. Meta could continue to exist as a tiered/overarching community concerned with the programming boards in general.

In discussion of expanding migration paths at U&L, some members have expressed opposition explicitly because they do not want to increase the significance of the Stack Exchange community in general. I consider this unfortunate; IMO the individual boards would be better served with a higher degree of integration -- just, not to the point of the "one ring to bind them all" board, which is where things stand currently WRT programming.