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replaced http://stackoverflow.com/ with https://stackoverflow.com/
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I think we've got some meanings of terms crossed.

Vampires, in the context of online communities, are people that continuously take everything that they can, and never (or rarely) give anything back. For Stack Overflow, these tend to be people that ask at least one question per assignment they're given during the day, because they find it easier than trying to work through solutions themselves.

We're here to help people become better programmers and communicators through the sharing of knowledge. If we teach you how to debug a problem, its with every expectation that you'll put that knowledge to good use, and share it with someone else that could use it.

Asking for help occasionally is something completely different than consuming the time of as many people as will let you, as you remain fully indifferent to the consequences of what you're doing. If too many of these types of people are present in a community, the experts go somewhere less mentally (and often emotionally) draining, and then we're sunk.

That's what Jeff was talking about.

Regarding the forum aspect - we're not a forum, we've tried to make it clear from the start that we're building a high quality reference library for programmers, you type in your problem, you find an answer, or wait a few minutes for someone to provide one. I'm not exactly sure how you, an obviously engaged user at one time, missed that. Folks were trying to tell you.

I will concede—for those who are used to traditional forums, we do look an awful lot like one, and we've made some changes since you became a new user. Our new tourtour page is shown to everyone that asks a question, and it does a much better job of letting folks know what we're about, and what we expect. There's also some new just-in-time help for folks that we've rolled out (but not yet really populated), to assist them during their first few questions—because we are different and using our site is a skill you need to learn. But, in order to do that, folks need to read and getting some to do that is surprisingly difficult.

We're also working on the blocking, so folks that have real aptitude and just some difficulty adapting to high-quality Q&A aren't as quickly discouraged, just slowed down a tad.

Yes, the new user experience is something that still needs work, and we're working on it. And hey, I'm glad you found a place to participate that works for you. Still, the level of disconnect you're articulating is quite a bit far from common.

I think we've got some meanings of terms crossed.

Vampires, in the context of online communities, are people that continuously take everything that they can, and never (or rarely) give anything back. For Stack Overflow, these tend to be people that ask at least one question per assignment they're given during the day, because they find it easier than trying to work through solutions themselves.

We're here to help people become better programmers and communicators through the sharing of knowledge. If we teach you how to debug a problem, its with every expectation that you'll put that knowledge to good use, and share it with someone else that could use it.

Asking for help occasionally is something completely different than consuming the time of as many people as will let you, as you remain fully indifferent to the consequences of what you're doing. If too many of these types of people are present in a community, the experts go somewhere less mentally (and often emotionally) draining, and then we're sunk.

That's what Jeff was talking about.

Regarding the forum aspect - we're not a forum, we've tried to make it clear from the start that we're building a high quality reference library for programmers, you type in your problem, you find an answer, or wait a few minutes for someone to provide one. I'm not exactly sure how you, an obviously engaged user at one time, missed that. Folks were trying to tell you.

I will concede—for those who are used to traditional forums, we do look an awful lot like one, and we've made some changes since you became a new user. Our new tour page is shown to everyone that asks a question, and it does a much better job of letting folks know what we're about, and what we expect. There's also some new just-in-time help for folks that we've rolled out (but not yet really populated), to assist them during their first few questions—because we are different and using our site is a skill you need to learn. But, in order to do that, folks need to read and getting some to do that is surprisingly difficult.

We're also working on the blocking, so folks that have real aptitude and just some difficulty adapting to high-quality Q&A aren't as quickly discouraged, just slowed down a tad.

Yes, the new user experience is something that still needs work, and we're working on it. And hey, I'm glad you found a place to participate that works for you. Still, the level of disconnect you're articulating is quite a bit far from common.

I think we've got some meanings of terms crossed.

Vampires, in the context of online communities, are people that continuously take everything that they can, and never (or rarely) give anything back. For Stack Overflow, these tend to be people that ask at least one question per assignment they're given during the day, because they find it easier than trying to work through solutions themselves.

We're here to help people become better programmers and communicators through the sharing of knowledge. If we teach you how to debug a problem, its with every expectation that you'll put that knowledge to good use, and share it with someone else that could use it.

Asking for help occasionally is something completely different than consuming the time of as many people as will let you, as you remain fully indifferent to the consequences of what you're doing. If too many of these types of people are present in a community, the experts go somewhere less mentally (and often emotionally) draining, and then we're sunk.

That's what Jeff was talking about.

Regarding the forum aspect - we're not a forum, we've tried to make it clear from the start that we're building a high quality reference library for programmers, you type in your problem, you find an answer, or wait a few minutes for someone to provide one. I'm not exactly sure how you, an obviously engaged user at one time, missed that. Folks were trying to tell you.

I will concede—for those who are used to traditional forums, we do look an awful lot like one, and we've made some changes since you became a new user. Our new tour page is shown to everyone that asks a question, and it does a much better job of letting folks know what we're about, and what we expect. There's also some new just-in-time help for folks that we've rolled out (but not yet really populated), to assist them during their first few questions—because we are different and using our site is a skill you need to learn. But, in order to do that, folks need to read and getting some to do that is surprisingly difficult.

We're also working on the blocking, so folks that have real aptitude and just some difficulty adapting to high-quality Q&A aren't as quickly discouraged, just slowed down a tad.

Yes, the new user experience is something that still needs work, and we're working on it. And hey, I'm glad you found a place to participate that works for you. Still, the level of disconnect you're articulating is quite a bit far from common.

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

I think we've got some meanings of terms crossed.

Vampires, in the context of online communities, are people that continuously take everything that they can, and never (or rarely) give anything back. For Stack Overflow, these tend to be people that ask at least one question per assignment they're given during the day, because they find it easier than trying to work through solutions themselves.

We're here to help people become better programmers and communicators through the sharing of knowledge. If we teach you how to debug a problem, its with every expectation that you'll put that knowledge to good use, and share it with someone else that could use it.

Asking for help occasionally is something completely different than consuming the time of as many people as will let you, as you remain fully indifferent to the consequences of what you're doing. If too many of these types of people are present in a community, the experts go somewhere less mentally (and often emotionally) draining, and then we're sunk.

That's what Jeff was talking about.

Regarding the forum aspect - we're not a forum, we've tried to make it clear from the start that we're building a high quality reference library for programmers, you type in your problem, you find an answer, or wait a few minutes for someone to provide one. I'm not exactly sure how you, an obviously engaged user at one time, missed that. Folks were trying to tell you.

I will concede—for those who are used to traditional forums, we do look an awful lot like one, and we've made some changes since you became a new user. Our new tour page is shown to everyone that asks a question, and it does a much better job of letting folks know what we're about, and what we expect. There's also some new just-in-time help for folks that we've rolled out (but not yet really populated), to assist them during their first few questions—because we are different and using our site is a skill you need to learn. But, in order to do that, folks need to read and getting some to do that is surprisingly difficult.

We're also working on the blockingon the blocking, so folks that have real aptitude and just some difficulty adapting to high-quality Q&A aren't as quickly discouraged, just slowed down a tad.

Yes, the new user experience is something that still needs work, and we're working on it. And hey, I'm glad you found a place to participate that works for you. Still, the level of disconnect you're articulating is quite a bit far from common.

I think we've got some meanings of terms crossed.

Vampires, in the context of online communities, are people that continuously take everything that they can, and never (or rarely) give anything back. For Stack Overflow, these tend to be people that ask at least one question per assignment they're given during the day, because they find it easier than trying to work through solutions themselves.

We're here to help people become better programmers and communicators through the sharing of knowledge. If we teach you how to debug a problem, its with every expectation that you'll put that knowledge to good use, and share it with someone else that could use it.

Asking for help occasionally is something completely different than consuming the time of as many people as will let you, as you remain fully indifferent to the consequences of what you're doing. If too many of these types of people are present in a community, the experts go somewhere less mentally (and often emotionally) draining, and then we're sunk.

That's what Jeff was talking about.

Regarding the forum aspect - we're not a forum, we've tried to make it clear from the start that we're building a high quality reference library for programmers, you type in your problem, you find an answer, or wait a few minutes for someone to provide one. I'm not exactly sure how you, an obviously engaged user at one time, missed that. Folks were trying to tell you.

I will concede—for those who are used to traditional forums, we do look an awful lot like one, and we've made some changes since you became a new user. Our new tour page is shown to everyone that asks a question, and it does a much better job of letting folks know what we're about, and what we expect. There's also some new just-in-time help for folks that we've rolled out (but not yet really populated), to assist them during their first few questions—because we are different and using our site is a skill you need to learn. But, in order to do that, folks need to read and getting some to do that is surprisingly difficult.

We're also working on the blocking, so folks that have real aptitude and just some difficulty adapting to high-quality Q&A aren't as quickly discouraged, just slowed down a tad.

Yes, the new user experience is something that still needs work, and we're working on it. And hey, I'm glad you found a place to participate that works for you. Still, the level of disconnect you're articulating is quite a bit far from common.

I think we've got some meanings of terms crossed.

Vampires, in the context of online communities, are people that continuously take everything that they can, and never (or rarely) give anything back. For Stack Overflow, these tend to be people that ask at least one question per assignment they're given during the day, because they find it easier than trying to work through solutions themselves.

We're here to help people become better programmers and communicators through the sharing of knowledge. If we teach you how to debug a problem, its with every expectation that you'll put that knowledge to good use, and share it with someone else that could use it.

Asking for help occasionally is something completely different than consuming the time of as many people as will let you, as you remain fully indifferent to the consequences of what you're doing. If too many of these types of people are present in a community, the experts go somewhere less mentally (and often emotionally) draining, and then we're sunk.

That's what Jeff was talking about.

Regarding the forum aspect - we're not a forum, we've tried to make it clear from the start that we're building a high quality reference library for programmers, you type in your problem, you find an answer, or wait a few minutes for someone to provide one. I'm not exactly sure how you, an obviously engaged user at one time, missed that. Folks were trying to tell you.

I will concede—for those who are used to traditional forums, we do look an awful lot like one, and we've made some changes since you became a new user. Our new tour page is shown to everyone that asks a question, and it does a much better job of letting folks know what we're about, and what we expect. There's also some new just-in-time help for folks that we've rolled out (but not yet really populated), to assist them during their first few questions—because we are different and using our site is a skill you need to learn. But, in order to do that, folks need to read and getting some to do that is surprisingly difficult.

We're also working on the blocking, so folks that have real aptitude and just some difficulty adapting to high-quality Q&A aren't as quickly discouraged, just slowed down a tad.

Yes, the new user experience is something that still needs work, and we're working on it. And hey, I'm glad you found a place to participate that works for you. Still, the level of disconnect you're articulating is quite a bit far from common.

fixed typo
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I think we've got some meanings of terms crossed.

Vampires, in the context of online communities, are people that continuously take everything that they can, and never (or rarely) give anything back. For Stack Overflow, these tend to be people that ask at least one question per assignment they're given during the day, because they find it easier than trying to work through solutions themselves.

We're here to help people become better programmers and communicators through the sharing of knowledge. If we teach you how to debug a problem, its with every expectation that you'll put that knowledge to good use, and share it with someone else that could use it.

Asking for help occasionally is something completely different than consuming the time of as many people as will let you, as you remain fully indifferent to the consequences of what you're doing. If too many of these types of people are present in a community, the experts go somewhere less mentally (and often emotionally) draining, and then we're sunk.

That's what Jeff was talking about.

Regarding the forum aspect - we're not a forum, we've tried to make it clear from the start that we're building a high quality reference library for programmers, you type in your problem, you find an answer, or wait a few minutes for someone to provide one. I'm not exactly sure how you, an obviously engaged user at one time, missed that. Folks were trying to tell you.

I will concede—for those who are used to traditional forums, we do look an awful lot like one, and we've made some changes since you became a new user. Our new tour page is shown to everyone that asks a question, and it does a much better job of letting folks know what we're about, and what we expect. There's also some new just-in-time help for folks that we've rolled out (but not yet really populated), to assist them during their first few questions—because we are different and using our site is a skill you need to learn. But, in order to do that, folks need to read and getting some to do that is surprisingly difficult.

We're also working on the blocking, so folks that have real aptitude and just some difficulty adapting to high-quality Q&A aren't as quickly discouraged, just slowed down a tad.

Yes, the new user experience is something that still needs work, and we're working on it. And hey, I'm glad you found a place to participate that works for you. Still, the level of disconnect you're articulating is quite a bit far from common.

I think we've got some meanings of terms crossed.

Vampires, in the context of online communities, are people that continuously take everything that they can, and never (or rarely) give anything back. For Stack Overflow, these tend to be people that ask at least one question per assignment they're given during the day, because they find it easier than trying to work through solutions themselves.

We're here to help people become better programmers and communicators through the sharing of knowledge. If we teach you how to debug a problem, its with every expectation that you'll put that knowledge to good use, and share it with someone else that could use it.

Asking for help occasionally is something completely different than consuming the time of as many people as will let you, as you remain fully indifferent to the consequences of what you're doing. If too many of these types of people are present in a community, the experts go somewhere less mentally (and often emotionally) draining, and then we're sunk.

That's what Jeff was talking about.

Regarding the forum aspect - we're not a forum, we've tried to make it clear from the start that we're building a high quality reference library for programmers, you type in your problem, you find an answer, or wait a few minutes for someone to provide one. I'm not exactly sure how you, an obviously engaged user at one time, missed that. Folks were trying to tell you.

I will concede—for those used to traditional forums, we do look an awful lot like one, and we've made some changes since you became a new user. Our new tour page is shown to everyone that asks a question, and it does a much better job of letting folks know what we're about, and what we expect. There's also some new just-in-time help for folks that we've rolled out (but not yet really populated), to assist them during their first few questions—because we are different and using our site is a skill you need to learn. But, in order to do that, folks need to read and getting some to do that is surprisingly difficult.

We're also working on the blocking, so folks that have real aptitude and just some difficulty adapting to high-quality Q&A aren't as quickly discouraged, just slowed down a tad.

Yes, the new user experience is something that still needs work, and we're working on it. And hey, I'm glad you found a place to participate that works for you. Still, the level of disconnect you're articulating is quite a bit far from common.

I think we've got some meanings of terms crossed.

Vampires, in the context of online communities, are people that continuously take everything that they can, and never (or rarely) give anything back. For Stack Overflow, these tend to be people that ask at least one question per assignment they're given during the day, because they find it easier than trying to work through solutions themselves.

We're here to help people become better programmers and communicators through the sharing of knowledge. If we teach you how to debug a problem, its with every expectation that you'll put that knowledge to good use, and share it with someone else that could use it.

Asking for help occasionally is something completely different than consuming the time of as many people as will let you, as you remain fully indifferent to the consequences of what you're doing. If too many of these types of people are present in a community, the experts go somewhere less mentally (and often emotionally) draining, and then we're sunk.

That's what Jeff was talking about.

Regarding the forum aspect - we're not a forum, we've tried to make it clear from the start that we're building a high quality reference library for programmers, you type in your problem, you find an answer, or wait a few minutes for someone to provide one. I'm not exactly sure how you, an obviously engaged user at one time, missed that. Folks were trying to tell you.

I will concede—for those who are used to traditional forums, we do look an awful lot like one, and we've made some changes since you became a new user. Our new tour page is shown to everyone that asks a question, and it does a much better job of letting folks know what we're about, and what we expect. There's also some new just-in-time help for folks that we've rolled out (but not yet really populated), to assist them during their first few questions—because we are different and using our site is a skill you need to learn. But, in order to do that, folks need to read and getting some to do that is surprisingly difficult.

We're also working on the blocking, so folks that have real aptitude and just some difficulty adapting to high-quality Q&A aren't as quickly discouraged, just slowed down a tad.

Yes, the new user experience is something that still needs work, and we're working on it. And hey, I'm glad you found a place to participate that works for you. Still, the level of disconnect you're articulating is quite a bit far from common.

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