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Active reading. [<http://english.stackexchange.com/questions/4645/is-it-ever-correct-to-have-a-space-before-a-question-or-exclamation-mark#comment206109_4645>]
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Peter Mortensen
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I don't believe this is a good idea.

MainThe main reason to me is that a new user will see a chat room and ask his question there. Then people in there will have to explain to him/her that they are not here to answer his/her question, but to help him/her ask the first question properly...

If he/she has the time it takes to ask a proper question, fine. Maybe he'll accept to be mentored that way. But I honnestlyhonestly do not think it will be the case for most users.

How do modern video games get new users into action as quickly as possible  ? With an undercovered tutorial. The first missions are the tutorials, but the story has started already, and information comes byte by byte, not all at once.

So why not do so here  ? Cody Gray started a post and I liked this answer.

The main idea is to guide the users step by step. A chat room will not solve the basic problem that a user has an immediate need of help and will find the fastest possible way to get help, even if it doesn't cope with the standards in place. Because he/she (wrongly) assumes that reading the whole tutorial to ask just one question is a loss of time.

So ask him, question by question, what is his problem. Then you can direct him easily towards a new question that can be asked, a question that already exists or a chat room that would help him solve his problem.

From some comments I receive for this answer, a new idea just came out. That if you want to aim at some undercover tutorial, make this chat-room, then make it monitored by learning bots. At the beginning they will need help from real mentors, but I'm pretty sure after a while they will be able to help 90% of the new users...

I don't believe this is a good idea.

Main reason to me is that a new user will see a chat room and ask his question there. Then people in there will have to explain to him/her that they are not here to answer his/her question but to help him/her ask the first question properly...

If he/she has the time it takes to ask a proper question, fine. Maybe he'll accept to be mentored that way. But I honnestly do not think it will be the case for most users.

How do modern video games get new users into action as quickly as possible  ? With an undercovered tutorial. The first missions are the tutorials, but the story has started already, and information comes byte by byte, not all at once.

So why not do so here  ? Cody Gray started a post and I liked this answer.

The main idea is to guide the users step by step. A chat room will not solve the basic problem that a user has an immediate need of help and will find the fastest possible way to get help, even if it doesn't cope with the standards in place. Because he/she (wrongly) assumes that reading the whole tutorial to ask just one question is a loss of time.

So ask him, question by question, what is his problem. Then you can direct him easily towards a new question that can be asked, a question that already exists or a chat room that would help him solve his problem.

From some comments I receive for this answer, a new idea just came out. That if you want to aim at some undercover tutorial, make this chat-room, then make it monitored by learning bots. At the beginning they will need help from real mentors, but I'm pretty sure after a while they will be able to help 90% of the new users...

I don't believe this is a good idea.

The main reason to me is that a new user will see a chat room and ask his question there. Then people in there will have to explain to him/her that they are not here to answer his/her question, but to help him/her ask the first question properly...

If he/she has the time it takes to ask a proper question, fine. Maybe he'll accept to be mentored that way. But I honestly do not think it will be the case for most users.

How do modern video games get new users into action as quickly as possible? With an undercovered tutorial. The first missions are the tutorials, but the story has started already, and information comes byte by byte, not all at once.

So why not do so here? Cody Gray started a post and I liked this answer.

The main idea is to guide the users step by step. A chat room will not solve the basic problem that a user has an immediate need of help and will find the fastest possible way to get help, even if it doesn't cope with the standards in place. Because he/she (wrongly) assumes that reading the whole tutorial to ask just one question is a loss of time.

So ask him, question by question, what is his problem. Then you can direct him easily towards a new question that can be asked, a question that already exists or a chat room that would help him solve his problem.

From some comments I receive for this answer, a new idea just came out. That if you want to aim at some undercover tutorial, make this chat-room, then make it monitored by learning bots. At the beginning they will need help from real mentors, but I'm pretty sure after a while they will be able to help 90% of the new users...

added 330 characters in body
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Martin Verjans
  • 4.8k
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  • 9
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I don't believe this is a good idea.

Main reason to me is that a new user will see a chat room and ask his question there. Then people in there will have to explain to him/her that they are not here to answer his/her question but to help him/her ask the first question properly...

If he/she has the time it takes to ask a proper question, fine. Maybe he'll accept to be mentored that way. But I honnestly do not think it will be the case for most users.

How do modern video games get new users into action as quickly as possible ? With an undercovered tutorial. The first missions are the tutorials, but the story has started already, and information comes byte by byte, not all at once.

So why not do so here ? Cody Gray started a post and I liked this answer.

The main idea is to guide the users step by step. A chat room will not solve the basic problem that a user has an immediate need of help and will find the fastest possible way to get help, even if it doesn't cope with the standards in place. Because he/she (wrongly) assumes that reading the whole tutorial to ask just one question is a loss of time.

So ask him, question by question, what is his problem. Then you can direct him easily towards a new question that can be asked, a question that already exists or a chat room that would help him solve his problem.

From some comments I receive for this answer, a new idea just came out. That if you want to aim at some undercover tutorial, make this chat-room, then make it monitored by learning bots. At the beginning they will need help from real mentors, but I'm pretty sure after a while they will be able to help 90% of the new users...

I don't believe this is a good idea.

Main reason to me is that a new user will see a chat room and ask his question there. Then people in there will have to explain to him/her that they are not here to answer his/her question but to help him/her ask the first question properly...

If he/she has the time it takes to ask a proper question, fine. Maybe he'll accept to be mentored that way. But I honnestly do not think it will be the case for most users.

How do modern video games get new users into action as quickly as possible ? With an undercovered tutorial. The first missions are the tutorials, but the story has started already, and information comes byte by byte, not all at once.

So why not do so here ? Cody Gray started a post and I liked this answer.

The main idea is to guide the users step by step. A chat room will not solve the basic problem that a user has an immediate need of help and will find the fastest possible way to get help, even if it doesn't cope with the standards in place. Because he/she (wrongly) assumes that reading the whole tutorial to ask just one question is a loss of time.

So ask him, question by question, what is his problem. Then you can direct him easily towards a new question that can be asked, a question that already exists or a chat room that would help him solve his problem.

I don't believe this is a good idea.

Main reason to me is that a new user will see a chat room and ask his question there. Then people in there will have to explain to him/her that they are not here to answer his/her question but to help him/her ask the first question properly...

If he/she has the time it takes to ask a proper question, fine. Maybe he'll accept to be mentored that way. But I honnestly do not think it will be the case for most users.

How do modern video games get new users into action as quickly as possible ? With an undercovered tutorial. The first missions are the tutorials, but the story has started already, and information comes byte by byte, not all at once.

So why not do so here ? Cody Gray started a post and I liked this answer.

The main idea is to guide the users step by step. A chat room will not solve the basic problem that a user has an immediate need of help and will find the fastest possible way to get help, even if it doesn't cope with the standards in place. Because he/she (wrongly) assumes that reading the whole tutorial to ask just one question is a loss of time.

So ask him, question by question, what is his problem. Then you can direct him easily towards a new question that can be asked, a question that already exists or a chat room that would help him solve his problem.

From some comments I receive for this answer, a new idea just came out. That if you want to aim at some undercover tutorial, make this chat-room, then make it monitored by learning bots. At the beginning they will need help from real mentors, but I'm pretty sure after a while they will be able to help 90% of the new users...

added 4 characters in body
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Martin Verjans
  • 4.8k
  • 1
  • 9
  • 14

I don't believe this is a good idea.

Main reason to me is that a new user will see a chat room and ask his question there. Then people in there will have to explain to him/her that they are not here to answer his/her question but to help him/her ask the first question properly...

If he/she has the time it takes to ask a proper question, fine. Maybe he'll accept to be mentored that way. But I honnestly do not think it will be the case for most users.

How do modern video games get new users into action as quickly as possible ?How do modern video games get new users into action as quickly as possible ? With an undercovered tutorial. The first missions are the tutorials, but the story has started already, and information comes byte by byte, not all at once.

So why not do so here ? Cody Gray started a post and I liked this answer.

The main idea is to guide the users step by step. A chat room will not solve the basic problem that a user has an immediate need of help and will find the fastest possible way to get help, even if it doesn't cope with the standards in place. Because he/she (wrongly) assumes that reading the whole tutorial to ask just one question is a loss of time.

So ask him, question by question, what is his problem. Then you can direct him easily towards a new question that can be asked, a question that already exists or a chat room that would help him solve his problem.

I don't believe this is a good idea.

Main reason to me is that a new user will see a chat room and ask his question there. Then people in there will have to explain to him/her that they are not here to answer his/her question but to help him/her ask the first question properly...

If he/she has the time it takes to ask a proper question, fine. Maybe he'll accept to be mentored that way. But I honnestly do not think it will be the case for most users.

How do modern video games get new users into action as quickly as possible ? With an undercovered tutorial. The first missions are the tutorials, but the story has started already, and information comes byte by byte, not all at once.

So why not do so here ? Cody Gray started a post and I liked this answer.

The main idea is to guide the users step by step. A chat room will not solve the basic problem that a user has an immediate need of help and will find the fastest possible way to get help, even if it doesn't cope with the standards in place. Because he/she (wrongly) assumes that reading the whole tutorial to ask just one question is a loss of time.

So ask him, question by question, what is his problem. Then you can direct him easily towards a new question that can be asked, a question that already exists or a chat room that would help him solve his problem.

I don't believe this is a good idea.

Main reason to me is that a new user will see a chat room and ask his question there. Then people in there will have to explain to him/her that they are not here to answer his/her question but to help him/her ask the first question properly...

If he/she has the time it takes to ask a proper question, fine. Maybe he'll accept to be mentored that way. But I honnestly do not think it will be the case for most users.

How do modern video games get new users into action as quickly as possible ? With an undercovered tutorial. The first missions are the tutorials, but the story has started already, and information comes byte by byte, not all at once.

So why not do so here ? Cody Gray started a post and I liked this answer.

The main idea is to guide the users step by step. A chat room will not solve the basic problem that a user has an immediate need of help and will find the fastest possible way to get help, even if it doesn't cope with the standards in place. Because he/she (wrongly) assumes that reading the whole tutorial to ask just one question is a loss of time.

So ask him, question by question, what is his problem. Then you can direct him easily towards a new question that can be asked, a question that already exists or a chat room that would help him solve his problem.

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Martin Verjans
  • 4.8k
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  • 14
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