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Changed "human beans" to "human beings"
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Nimantha
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This answer exists to present some implications of Shog9's authoritative response.

Shog9 offers a vision on which the SO is the ultimate Mechanical Turk of programming question-answering. The fact that human beings labor to deliver the answers isn't the important thing. The important idea that questions that meet the entrance criteria find answers. Questions that don't, don't.

If this is the vision, I respectfully submit that there's a fair amount of window-dressing that needs some refreshing. These are places where FAQ's and other materials talk about community in a broad way. The anti-communal vision should be uniformly and relentlessly pushed at every opportunity. A new visitor's interactions with the site should miss no opportunity to paint this picture.

While the site, as a whole, is not a community, there are important communities that contribute to the site -- the experts who answer the questions. The 'community' branding of the meta site(s) presumably stems from this. However, at the moment, there's constant confusion between a narrow idea of the community of experts and the impossibly ideal of the giant community of all.

How much community-of-experts is enough? What tools make sense as part of the sites to facilitate it? It is possible to try to avoid community even amongst the experts, but are there really enough of us to have collective Feet of, ahem, Clay?

Comment-motivated expansion: Shog9 eloquently presented the constant drive of human beansbeings for social contact. It will always be hard to explain to new users that these sites have chosen to limit that social contact in hopes of achieving a higher goal. If you want to spend less time reading an endless series of meta-questions and comments and (for all I know) emails to the team complaining about 'mean-ness', I submit that you'll have to 'front' this aspect of the site. Whether that means eliminating the word 'community' or not is not for me to say.

This answer exists to present some implications of Shog9's authoritative response.

Shog9 offers a vision on which the SO is the ultimate Mechanical Turk of programming question-answering. The fact that human beings labor to deliver the answers isn't the important thing. The important idea that questions that meet the entrance criteria find answers. Questions that don't, don't.

If this is the vision, I respectfully submit that there's a fair amount of window-dressing that needs some refreshing. These are places where FAQ's and other materials talk about community in a broad way. The anti-communal vision should be uniformly and relentlessly pushed at every opportunity. A new visitor's interactions with the site should miss no opportunity to paint this picture.

While the site, as a whole, is not a community, there are important communities that contribute to the site -- the experts who answer the questions. The 'community' branding of the meta site(s) presumably stems from this. However, at the moment, there's constant confusion between a narrow idea of the community of experts and the impossibly ideal of the giant community of all.

How much community-of-experts is enough? What tools make sense as part of the sites to facilitate it? It is possible to try to avoid community even amongst the experts, but are there really enough of us to have collective Feet of, ahem, Clay?

Comment-motivated expansion: Shog9 eloquently presented the constant drive of human beans for social contact. It will always be hard to explain to new users that these sites have chosen to limit that social contact in hopes of achieving a higher goal. If you want to spend less time reading an endless series of meta-questions and comments and (for all I know) emails to the team complaining about 'mean-ness', I submit that you'll have to 'front' this aspect of the site. Whether that means eliminating the word 'community' or not is not for me to say.

This answer exists to present some implications of Shog9's authoritative response.

Shog9 offers a vision on which the SO is the ultimate Mechanical Turk of programming question-answering. The fact that human beings labor to deliver the answers isn't the important thing. The important idea that questions that meet the entrance criteria find answers. Questions that don't, don't.

If this is the vision, I respectfully submit that there's a fair amount of window-dressing that needs some refreshing. These are places where FAQ's and other materials talk about community in a broad way. The anti-communal vision should be uniformly and relentlessly pushed at every opportunity. A new visitor's interactions with the site should miss no opportunity to paint this picture.

While the site, as a whole, is not a community, there are important communities that contribute to the site -- the experts who answer the questions. The 'community' branding of the meta site(s) presumably stems from this. However, at the moment, there's constant confusion between a narrow idea of the community of experts and the impossibly ideal of the giant community of all.

How much community-of-experts is enough? What tools make sense as part of the sites to facilitate it? It is possible to try to avoid community even amongst the experts, but are there really enough of us to have collective Feet of, ahem, Clay?

Comment-motivated expansion: Shog9 eloquently presented the constant drive of human beings for social contact. It will always be hard to explain to new users that these sites have chosen to limit that social contact in hopes of achieving a higher goal. If you want to spend less time reading an endless series of meta-questions and comments and (for all I know) emails to the team complaining about 'mean-ness', I submit that you'll have to 'front' this aspect of the site. Whether that means eliminating the word 'community' or not is not for me to say.

replaced http://meta.stackoverflow.com/ with https://meta.stackoverflow.com/
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This answer exists to present some implications of Shog9's authoritative responseShog9's authoritative response.

Shog9 offers a vision on which the SO is the ultimate Mechanical Turk of programming question-answering. The fact that human beings labor to deliver the answers isn't the important thing. The important idea that questions that meet the entrance criteria find answers. Questions that don't, don't.

If this is the vision, I respectfully submit that there's a fair amount of window-dressing that needs some refreshing. These are places where FAQ's and other materials talk about community in a broad way. The anti-communal vision should be uniformly and relentlessly pushed at every opportunity. A new visitor's interactions with the site should miss no opportunity to paint this picture.

While the site, as a whole, is not a community, there are important communities that contribute to the site -- the experts who answer the questions. The 'community' branding of the meta site(s) presumably stems from this. However, at the moment, there's constant confusion between a narrow idea of the community of experts and the impossibly ideal of the giant community of all.

How much community-of-experts is enough? What tools make sense as part of the sites to facilitate it? It is possible to try to avoid community even amongst the experts, but are there really enough of us to have collective Feet of, ahem, Clay?

Comment-motivated expansion: Shog9 eloquently presented the constant drive of human beans for social contact. It will always be hard to explain to new users that these sites have chosen to limit that social contact in hopes of achieving a higher goal. If you want to spend less time reading an endless series of meta-questions and comments and (for all I know) emails to the team complaining about 'mean-ness', I submit that you'll have to 'front' this aspect of the site. Whether that means eliminating the word 'community' or not is not for me to say.

This answer exists to present some implications of Shog9's authoritative response.

Shog9 offers a vision on which the SO is the ultimate Mechanical Turk of programming question-answering. The fact that human beings labor to deliver the answers isn't the important thing. The important idea that questions that meet the entrance criteria find answers. Questions that don't, don't.

If this is the vision, I respectfully submit that there's a fair amount of window-dressing that needs some refreshing. These are places where FAQ's and other materials talk about community in a broad way. The anti-communal vision should be uniformly and relentlessly pushed at every opportunity. A new visitor's interactions with the site should miss no opportunity to paint this picture.

While the site, as a whole, is not a community, there are important communities that contribute to the site -- the experts who answer the questions. The 'community' branding of the meta site(s) presumably stems from this. However, at the moment, there's constant confusion between a narrow idea of the community of experts and the impossibly ideal of the giant community of all.

How much community-of-experts is enough? What tools make sense as part of the sites to facilitate it? It is possible to try to avoid community even amongst the experts, but are there really enough of us to have collective Feet of, ahem, Clay?

Comment-motivated expansion: Shog9 eloquently presented the constant drive of human beans for social contact. It will always be hard to explain to new users that these sites have chosen to limit that social contact in hopes of achieving a higher goal. If you want to spend less time reading an endless series of meta-questions and comments and (for all I know) emails to the team complaining about 'mean-ness', I submit that you'll have to 'front' this aspect of the site. Whether that means eliminating the word 'community' or not is not for me to say.

This answer exists to present some implications of Shog9's authoritative response.

Shog9 offers a vision on which the SO is the ultimate Mechanical Turk of programming question-answering. The fact that human beings labor to deliver the answers isn't the important thing. The important idea that questions that meet the entrance criteria find answers. Questions that don't, don't.

If this is the vision, I respectfully submit that there's a fair amount of window-dressing that needs some refreshing. These are places where FAQ's and other materials talk about community in a broad way. The anti-communal vision should be uniformly and relentlessly pushed at every opportunity. A new visitor's interactions with the site should miss no opportunity to paint this picture.

While the site, as a whole, is not a community, there are important communities that contribute to the site -- the experts who answer the questions. The 'community' branding of the meta site(s) presumably stems from this. However, at the moment, there's constant confusion between a narrow idea of the community of experts and the impossibly ideal of the giant community of all.

How much community-of-experts is enough? What tools make sense as part of the sites to facilitate it? It is possible to try to avoid community even amongst the experts, but are there really enough of us to have collective Feet of, ahem, Clay?

Comment-motivated expansion: Shog9 eloquently presented the constant drive of human beans for social contact. It will always be hard to explain to new users that these sites have chosen to limit that social contact in hopes of achieving a higher goal. If you want to spend less time reading an endless series of meta-questions and comments and (for all I know) emails to the team complaining about 'mean-ness', I submit that you'll have to 'front' this aspect of the site. Whether that means eliminating the word 'community' or not is not for me to say.

deleted 11 characters in body
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tshepang
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This answer exists to present some implications of Shog9's authoritative response.

Shog9 offers a vision on which the SO is the ultimate Mechanical Turk of programming question-answering. The fact that human beings labor to deliver the answers isn't the important thing. The important idea that questions that meet the entrance criteria find answers. Questions that don't, don't.

If this is the vision, I respectfully submit that there's a fair amount of window-dressing that needs some refreshing. These are places where FAQ's and other materials talk about community in a broad way. The anti-communal vision should be uniformly and relentlessly pushed at every opportunity. A new visitor's interactions with the site should miss no opportunity to paint this picture.

While the site, as a whole, is not a community, there are important communities that contribute to the site -- the experts who answer the questions. The 'community' branding of the meta site(s) presumably stems from this. However, at the moment, there's constant confusion between a narrow idea of the community of experts and the impossibly ideal of the giant community of all.

How much community-of-experts is enough? What tools make sense as part of the sites to facilitate it? It is possible to try to try to avoid community even amongst the experts, but are there really enough of us to have collective Feet of, ahem, Clay?

Comment-motivated expansion: Shog9 eloquently presented the constant drive of human beans for social contact. It will always be hard to explain to new users that these sites have chosen to limit that social contact in hopes of achieving a higher goal. If you want to spend less time reading an endless series of meta-questions and comments and (for all I know) emails to the team complaining about 'mean-ness', I submit that you'll have to 'front' this aspect of the site. Whether that means eliminating the word 'community' or not is not for me to say.

This answer exists to present some implications of Shog9's authoritative response.

Shog9 offers a vision on which the SO is the ultimate Mechanical Turk of programming question-answering. The fact that human beings labor to deliver the answers isn't the important thing. The important idea that questions that meet the entrance criteria find answers. Questions that don't, don't.

If this is the vision, I respectfully submit that there's a fair amount of window-dressing that needs some refreshing. These are places where FAQ's and other materials talk about community in a broad way. The anti-communal vision should be uniformly and relentlessly pushed at every opportunity. A new visitor's interactions with the site should miss no opportunity to paint this picture.

While the site, as a whole, is not a community, there are important communities that contribute to the site -- the experts who answer the questions. The 'community' branding of the meta site(s) presumably stems from this. However, at the moment, there's constant confusion between a narrow idea of the community of experts and the impossibly ideal of the giant community of all.

How much community-of-experts is enough? What tools make sense as part of the sites to facilitate it? It is possible to try to try to avoid community even amongst the experts, but are there really enough of us to have collective Feet of, ahem, Clay?

Comment-motivated expansion: Shog9 eloquently presented the constant drive of human beans for social contact. It will always be hard to explain to new users that these sites have chosen to limit that social contact in hopes of achieving a higher goal. If you want to spend less time reading an endless series of meta-questions and comments and (for all I know) emails to the team complaining about 'mean-ness', I submit that you'll have to 'front' this aspect of the site. Whether that means eliminating the word 'community' or not is not for me to say.

This answer exists to present some implications of Shog9's authoritative response.

Shog9 offers a vision on which the SO is the ultimate Mechanical Turk of programming question-answering. The fact that human beings labor to deliver the answers isn't the important thing. The important idea that questions that meet the entrance criteria find answers. Questions that don't, don't.

If this is the vision, I respectfully submit that there's a fair amount of window-dressing that needs some refreshing. These are places where FAQ's and other materials talk about community in a broad way. The anti-communal vision should be uniformly and relentlessly pushed at every opportunity. A new visitor's interactions with the site should miss no opportunity to paint this picture.

While the site, as a whole, is not a community, there are important communities that contribute to the site -- the experts who answer the questions. The 'community' branding of the meta site(s) presumably stems from this. However, at the moment, there's constant confusion between a narrow idea of the community of experts and the impossibly ideal of the giant community of all.

How much community-of-experts is enough? What tools make sense as part of the sites to facilitate it? It is possible to try to avoid community even amongst the experts, but are there really enough of us to have collective Feet of, ahem, Clay?

Comment-motivated expansion: Shog9 eloquently presented the constant drive of human beans for social contact. It will always be hard to explain to new users that these sites have chosen to limit that social contact in hopes of achieving a higher goal. If you want to spend less time reading an endless series of meta-questions and comments and (for all I know) emails to the team complaining about 'mean-ness', I submit that you'll have to 'front' this aspect of the site. Whether that means eliminating the word 'community' or not is not for me to say.

added 560 characters in body
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bmargulies
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Shog9's authoritative response += http://meta.stackoverflow.com/a/256084
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gnat
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bmargulies
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