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replaced http://stackoverflow.com/ with https://stackoverflow.com/
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Well, my edit was rejectedmy edit was rejected.

I wasn't angry about it (mostly because I didn't know it was rejected until five minutes ago when I checked). I just kept going. I decided to ask a simple questionask a simple question. I waited.

While many of us know that those things aren't true, it's the impression we give if you make one too many mistakes. In my opinion, it's not that hard to take a little tourtour or read through some Help Center articlessome Help Center articles, so I did those things. I put effort into my question and my answers. However, I'm a rare case.

Well, my edit was rejected.

I wasn't angry about it (mostly because I didn't know it was rejected until five minutes ago when I checked). I just kept going. I decided to ask a simple question. I waited.

While many of us know that those things aren't true, it's the impression we give if you make one too many mistakes. In my opinion, it's not that hard to take a little tour or read through some Help Center articles, so I did those things. I put effort into my question and my answers. However, I'm a rare case.

Well, my edit was rejected.

I wasn't angry about it (mostly because I didn't know it was rejected until five minutes ago when I checked). I just kept going. I decided to ask a simple question. I waited.

While many of us know that those things aren't true, it's the impression we give if you make one too many mistakes. In my opinion, it's not that hard to take a little tour or read through some Help Center articles, so I did those things. I put effort into my question and my answers. However, I'm a rare case.

replaced http://meta.stackoverflow.com/ with https://meta.stackoverflow.com/
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6 days later, it got an upvote. Wow, I thought, someone actually thinks my question is useful. I started to answer a question or two, gather some badges, and make a few edits. That little number next to my name started growing. All the while, that question I asked started gaining more upvotes. Two months later, I answered my own question, stating that what I was trying to do was essentially impossible. But then, someone comes along and answers my question. While he did confirm that what I was asking is impossible, he provided a way to make it possible, which is what programming is all about. I was amazed. I started answering more and more questions, gaining reputation, and participating here on Meta. I've risen to become the fourth most active user herefourth most active user here, and I recently crossed a threshold of 2k reputation, giving me quite a few new powers to help keep the community in line and contribute more.

Throughout all of that, I haven't asked another question. "Why?" is a question you may be thinking. "You got an answer to your first." Yes, reader, I did. However, I've learned a lot since then. It's not because I didn't have questions and it's not because I didn't need answers. It's because one of the things I've learned is that asking a question is terrifyingasking a question is terrifying. It's shameful. It's dangerous. It's inhuman.

Most people don't care how their questions appear, why they appear, or even whether they're banned. For many, all they're looking for is an answer to their question. "Banned? So what? Just make a new account and ask again: maybe someone'll answer it before those evil 'Meta police'those evil 'Meta police' close the question for being 'unclear' (whatever that means)."

However, I can't be the only one who thinks that the Academy was (and still is) a good idea. It allows people like those of us who regularly participate in Meta discussion to help new usershelp new users understand and adapt to the Q&A model: we have to work together to prove that Stack Overflow is not a forum; it's not just another place where you can drop a poorly formatted and unclear post and walk away. In fact, if you do, people will even go to the trouble of editing it for you to fix errors and clean up your post.

That's also a major part of "The Problem." We have users who are willing to improve, and they are coming to Meta more and more commonly these days, prompting highly upvoted commentshighly upvoted comments like this:


  

6 days later, it got an upvote. Wow, I thought, someone actually thinks my question is useful. I started to answer a question or two, gather some badges, and make a few edits. That little number next to my name started growing. All the while, that question I asked started gaining more upvotes. Two months later, I answered my own question, stating that what I was trying to do was essentially impossible. But then, someone comes along and answers my question. While he did confirm that what I was asking is impossible, he provided a way to make it possible, which is what programming is all about. I was amazed. I started answering more and more questions, gaining reputation, and participating here on Meta. I've risen to become the fourth most active user here, and I recently crossed a threshold of 2k reputation, giving me quite a few new powers to help keep the community in line and contribute more.

Throughout all of that, I haven't asked another question. "Why?" is a question you may be thinking. "You got an answer to your first." Yes, reader, I did. However, I've learned a lot since then. It's not because I didn't have questions and it's not because I didn't need answers. It's because one of the things I've learned is that asking a question is terrifying. It's shameful. It's dangerous. It's inhuman.

Most people don't care how their questions appear, why they appear, or even whether they're banned. For many, all they're looking for is an answer to their question. "Banned? So what? Just make a new account and ask again: maybe someone'll answer it before those evil 'Meta police' close the question for being 'unclear' (whatever that means)."

However, I can't be the only one who thinks that the Academy was (and still is) a good idea. It allows people like those of us who regularly participate in Meta discussion to help new users understand and adapt to the Q&A model: we have to work together to prove that Stack Overflow is not a forum; it's not just another place where you can drop a poorly formatted and unclear post and walk away. In fact, if you do, people will even go to the trouble of editing it for you to fix errors and clean up your post.

That's also a major part of "The Problem." We have users who are willing to improve, and they are coming to Meta more and more commonly these days, prompting highly upvoted comments like this:


 

6 days later, it got an upvote. Wow, I thought, someone actually thinks my question is useful. I started to answer a question or two, gather some badges, and make a few edits. That little number next to my name started growing. All the while, that question I asked started gaining more upvotes. Two months later, I answered my own question, stating that what I was trying to do was essentially impossible. But then, someone comes along and answers my question. While he did confirm that what I was asking is impossible, he provided a way to make it possible, which is what programming is all about. I was amazed. I started answering more and more questions, gaining reputation, and participating here on Meta. I've risen to become the fourth most active user here, and I recently crossed a threshold of 2k reputation, giving me quite a few new powers to help keep the community in line and contribute more.

Throughout all of that, I haven't asked another question. "Why?" is a question you may be thinking. "You got an answer to your first." Yes, reader, I did. However, I've learned a lot since then. It's not because I didn't have questions and it's not because I didn't need answers. It's because one of the things I've learned is that asking a question is terrifying. It's shameful. It's dangerous. It's inhuman.

Most people don't care how their questions appear, why they appear, or even whether they're banned. For many, all they're looking for is an answer to their question. "Banned? So what? Just make a new account and ask again: maybe someone'll answer it before those evil 'Meta police' close the question for being 'unclear' (whatever that means)."

However, I can't be the only one who thinks that the Academy was (and still is) a good idea. It allows people like those of us who regularly participate in Meta discussion to help new users understand and adapt to the Q&A model: we have to work together to prove that Stack Overflow is not a forum; it's not just another place where you can drop a poorly formatted and unclear post and walk away. In fact, if you do, people will even go to the trouble of editing it for you to fix errors and clean up your post.

That's also a major part of "The Problem." We have users who are willing to improve, and they are coming to Meta more and more commonly these days, prompting highly upvoted comments like this:

 
Rollback to Revision 11
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AstroCB
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Throughout all of that, I haven't asked another question. "Why?" is a question you may be thinking. "You got an answer to youryour first question." Yes, reader, I did. However, I've learned a lot since then. It's not because I didn't have questions and it's not because I didn't need answers. It's because one of the things I've learned is that asking a question is terrifying. It's shameful. It's dangerous. It's inhuman.

Throughout all of that, I haven't asked another question. "Why?" is a question you may be thinking. "You got an answer to your first question." Yes, reader, I did. However, I've learned a lot since then. It's not because I didn't have questions and it's not because I didn't need answers. It's because one of the things I've learned is that asking a question is terrifying. It's shameful. It's dangerous. It's inhuman.

Throughout all of that, I haven't asked another question. "Why?" is a question you may be thinking. "You got an answer to your first." Yes, reader, I did. However, I've learned a lot since then. It's not because I didn't have questions and it's not because I didn't need answers. It's because one of the things I've learned is that asking a question is terrifying. It's shameful. It's dangerous. It's inhuman.

Added a missing word and italics for clarity
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TylerH
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edited body
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AstroCB
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Some fixup and stylistic grammatical changes
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AstroCB
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Some fixup and stylistic grammatical changes
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AstroCB
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added 4 characters in body
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Qantas 94 Heavy
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I've tried to improve the formatting of your post to make it easier to read. If I've screwed something up accidentally, please roll it back.
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Qantas 94 Heavy
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added 4 characters in body
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AstroCB
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added 4 characters in body
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AstroCB
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Could come off as an _ad hominem_.
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Jon Ericson Staff
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This post is on Meta.
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AstroCB
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Added TL;DR
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AstroCB
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AstroCB
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