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replaced http://meta.stackoverflow.com/ with https://meta.stackoverflow.com/
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TL;DR: I don't think the problem you describe exists, at least not on a larger scale. You just might have been unlucky with a few of your questions.


  

I think that the majority of the users of Stack Overflow probably come from one specific time zone.

Yes, that's more or less true. Stack Overflow sees significantly more traffic during European/African and American office hours.

So when a user which is not in this specific time zone asks a question it may not get answered because not as much users are awake / online to answer it.

That might be true, but there are also fewer questions to compete for attention. It turns out that these effects more or less cancel out, as noted herehere. In the graph below, you can see that there is some variation in the average view count, but not a real pattern.

number of questions and average view countnumber of questions and average view count

Now, if you ask a question in an obscure tag, and e.g. you're an Australian and most experts in that tag are located in Europe or the USA, your questions might escape their attention. However, most potential answerers browse questions by tags, and in a low-traffic tag your question will be longer on the frontpage of that particular tag.

TL;DR: I don't think the problem you describe exists, at least not on a larger scale. You just might have been unlucky with a few of your questions.


 

I think that the majority of the users of Stack Overflow probably come from one specific time zone.

Yes, that's more or less true. Stack Overflow sees significantly more traffic during European/African and American office hours.

So when a user which is not in this specific time zone asks a question it may not get answered because not as much users are awake / online to answer it.

That might be true, but there are also fewer questions to compete for attention. It turns out that these effects more or less cancel out, as noted here. In the graph below, you can see that there is some variation in the average view count, but not a real pattern.

number of questions and average view count

Now, if you ask a question in an obscure tag, and e.g. you're an Australian and most experts in that tag are located in Europe or the USA, your questions might escape their attention. However, most potential answerers browse questions by tags, and in a low-traffic tag your question will be longer on the frontpage of that particular tag.

TL;DR: I don't think the problem you describe exists, at least not on a larger scale. You just might have been unlucky with a few of your questions.

 

I think that the majority of the users of Stack Overflow probably come from one specific time zone.

Yes, that's more or less true. Stack Overflow sees significantly more traffic during European/African and American office hours.

So when a user which is not in this specific time zone asks a question it may not get answered because not as much users are awake / online to answer it.

That might be true, but there are also fewer questions to compete for attention. It turns out that these effects more or less cancel out, as noted here. In the graph below, you can see that there is some variation in the average view count, but not a real pattern.

number of questions and average view count

Now, if you ask a question in an obscure tag, and e.g. you're an Australian and most experts in that tag are located in Europe or the USA, your questions might escape their attention. However, most potential answerers browse questions by tags, and in a low-traffic tag your question will be longer on the frontpage of that particular tag.

Apologies for the ping but I had to fix that typo.
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ivarni
  • 17.8k
  • 1
  • 20
  • 19

TL;DR: I don't think the problem you describe exists, at least not on a larger scale. You just might have been unlucky with a few of your questions.


I think that the majority of the users of Stack Overflow probably come from one specific time zone.

Yes, that's more or less true. Stack Overflow sees significantly more traffic during European/African and American office hours.

So when a user which is not in this specific time zone asks a question it may not get answered because not as much users are awake / online to answer it.

That might be true, but there are also fewer questions to compete for attention. It turns out that these effects more or less cancel out, as noted here. In the graph below, you can see that there is some variation in the average view count, but not a real pattern.

number of questions and average view count

Now, if you ask a question in an obscure tag, and e.g. youryou're an Australian and most experts in that tag are located in Europe or the USA, your questions might escape their attention. However, most potential answerers browse questions by tags, and in a low-traffic tag your question will be longer on the frontpage of that particular tag.

TL;DR: I don't think the problem you describe exists, at least not on a larger scale. You just might have been unlucky with a few of your questions.


I think that the majority of the users of Stack Overflow probably come from one specific time zone.

Yes, that's more or less true. Stack Overflow sees significantly more traffic during European/African and American office hours.

So when a user which is not in this specific time zone asks a question it may not get answered because not as much users are awake / online to answer it.

That might be true, but there are also fewer questions to compete for attention. It turns out that these effects more or less cancel out, as noted here. In the graph below, you can see that there is some variation in the average view count, but not a real pattern.

number of questions and average view count

Now, if you ask a question in an obscure tag, and e.g. your an Australian and most experts in that tag are located in Europe or the USA, your questions might escape their attention. However, most potential answerers browse questions by tags, and in a low-traffic tag your question will be longer on the frontpage of that particular tag.

TL;DR: I don't think the problem you describe exists, at least not on a larger scale. You just might have been unlucky with a few of your questions.


I think that the majority of the users of Stack Overflow probably come from one specific time zone.

Yes, that's more or less true. Stack Overflow sees significantly more traffic during European/African and American office hours.

So when a user which is not in this specific time zone asks a question it may not get answered because not as much users are awake / online to answer it.

That might be true, but there are also fewer questions to compete for attention. It turns out that these effects more or less cancel out, as noted here. In the graph below, you can see that there is some variation in the average view count, but not a real pattern.

number of questions and average view count

Now, if you ask a question in an obscure tag, and e.g. you're an Australian and most experts in that tag are located in Europe or the USA, your questions might escape their attention. However, most potential answerers browse questions by tags, and in a low-traffic tag your question will be longer on the frontpage of that particular tag.

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Glorfindel
  • 22.6k
  • 31
  • 343
  • 347

TL;DR: I don't think the problem you describe exists, at least not on a larger scale. You just might have been unlucky with a few of your questions.


I think that the majority of the users of Stack Overflow probably come from one specific time zone.

Yes, that's more or less true. Stack Overflow sees significantly more traffic during European/African and American office hours.

So when a user which is not in this specific time zone asks a question it may not get answered because not as much users are awake / online to answer it.

That might be true, but there are also fewer questions to compete for attention. It turns out that these effects more or less cancel out, as noted here. In the graph below, you can see that there is some variation in the average view count, but not a real pattern.

number of questions and average view count

Now, if you ask a question in an obscure tag, and e.g. your an Australian and most experts in that tag are located in Europe or the USA, your questions might escape their attention. However, most potential answerers browse questions by tags, and in a low-traffic tag your question will be longer on the frontpage of that particular tag.