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Feb 23, 2015 at 14:05 comment added user289086 ... and that is why there are other sites that are filling in the niches of other types of questions. Reddit, quora, slant.co - these sites each take a different part of the "ask questions" pie and focus on their part. One can try to get other types of questions to work on the fringes of the scope, but it may not cater to that type of question as well (note: quora does delete non-questions, unclear questions and does appear to have some sort of duplicate closure/redirect).
Feb 23, 2015 at 13:58 comment added user289086 @DanDascalescu back in the day, SO wasn't getting 7k questions/day. It was still trying to find its focus and accepting questions of all types. Since then, it has found its focus and decided to get one type of question right - the strict Q&A focus. To further this focus, it has added and tweaked tools (comments (as second class citizens), improved community moderation, vote/reputation ratios, close reason tuning, Roomba scripts) to enhance this one type of question. It doesn't and can't do all types of questions well and maintain the quality it seeks to present.
Feb 23, 2015 at 9:19 comment added Dan Dascalescu @MichaelT: SO was great back in the day when you could ask what are the best books for programmers and not have the question closed in your face and then deleted. If the reason users are leaving your site is because they've been made to feel like shit then yes, that's wrong I would say.
Feb 22, 2015 at 22:47 comment added user289086 @DanDascalescu different people go different places. I find trying to participate in more than about 2 communities distracting. There are others on Twitter and even some on tumblr. Should we go pro lame that they are better Q&A platforms than SO? Or would it be more appropriate to say that different questions are best addressed on different platforms, and different people enjoy answering different questions? Is the internet too small that you can't have both Quora and SO? And why must a site cater to all types of questions?
Feb 22, 2015 at 2:16 comment added Dan Dascalescu Looking at Quora, a Q&A site with no concept of "closing", I think that on the contrary, more quality answerers will be attracted, including those who provide valuable insights that here on SO would be classified as "subjective". I'm very active in the Meteor tag, but I rarely see on SO any of the core Meteor developers. Instead, they hang out on Quora. Have a look at the Meteor tag.
Feb 20, 2015 at 19:06 comment added SiKing "... I doubt real experts would bother to hang around in any numbers" This! For real-world proof, see any group on LinkedIn.
Feb 19, 2015 at 20:25 comment added dmckee --- ex-moderator kitten @JonEricson The mere introduction of close votes didn't change the cruft problem because we then needed to establish a consensus about what constituted a good question to get things to stay closed. And we may disagree about what happened in the early days: I always was one of the grumpy fun haters and that may color the way I recall things. That said, I've been keen on this for early on. See meta.stackexchange.com/a/51710/2509, meta.stackexchange.com/a/55973/2509, meta.stackexchange.com/a/128465/2509 (point 2).
Feb 19, 2015 at 20:13 comment added Jon Ericson Staff I think there's some revisionist history in this answer. Sure there was a lot of "fluff" in the beta. But we really didn't know what we were doing. I asked a lot of fluff questions back then and the usual response I got was, "hey, why isn't this CW?" My questions weren't closed until years later. And at that point, I'd learned for myself that GTKY questions don't produce the results I was hoping for. Closing had roughly zero impact on my behaviour. As far as I can tell, there's no data showing that closing is the primary reason for quality questions.
Feb 19, 2015 at 7:16 history edited jscs CC BY-SA 3.0
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Feb 19, 2015 at 6:43 history answered dmckee --- ex-moderator kitten CC BY-SA 3.0