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Jan 18, 2021 at 12:03 history edited CommunityBot
replaced http://blog.stackoverflow.com with https://blog.stackoverflow.com
Apr 20, 2017 at 12:36 comment added Raphael If you have half an hour, please visit swift. It's a good example for why the current approach does not work for deprecating answers (or even questions). "over time the newer answer will "bubble up" through voting if the old answer genuinely is no longer relevant" -- this just does not happen, or very slowly.
May 18, 2015 at 8:19 vote accept Benjamin R
Nov 23, 2014 at 17:21 comment added Deduplicator Though only downvote the answer if you are absolutely sure it's not even useful for legacy-support anymore. You know, today we are creating the legacy-systems of tomorrow, which will be around for the next millenium.
Nov 23, 2014 at 14:18 comment added Benjamin R Yes, a meta tag makes more sense... I suppose I was thinking this would still be an ad-hoc process and nothing more. I just think questions specific to a very old version of a piece of software do seem like pollution and not elucidation. The result would be nothing heavy-handed, just if a question is "meta-tagged" then it is excluded from the set of similar questions that it would otherwise be a member of. But perhaps it really doesn't add enough to be worth the bother. Thanks for your reply.
Nov 23, 2014 at 11:19 history answered Flexo - Save the data dumpMod CC BY-SA 3.0