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I see two possible outcomes of this:

  1. Very, very few people actually use the feature, because they're just here to ask their question, not to chat with people about how to ask their question. If this happens, the feature hasn't actually accomplished much of anything, even if those few people actually get good feedback. The problems you laid out will still be happening about as frequently as they're happening now.

  2. Lots of people use it; a significant enough portion of the people asking questions actually use this to help them ask better question. The end result, the chat room is unusable because there are too many people talking over each other, and nobody can follow what's being said, and also there will be so many more people asking for help than there will be people willing/able to help them that only a very small portion of the people asking questions actually get help, and those that do get help will tend to get more superficial help, and not get significant amounts of feedback, because the people helping them will be in such a hurry to get to the other people looking to get help.

Now that doesn't mean that the feature will be net harmful as a result of this, so it doesn't mean that this alone is reason to not do it, but I'd say it has a very low ceiling as far as possible benefits.

Honestly this feature seems about as useful as people just asking on meta when they want help critiquing a question they have (either one already posted, or one not yet posted), which is to say that it works great in very small numbers, but just doesn't scale up.

This might be more likely to be a useful feature on smaller sites, rather than sites like SO, where the ratio of regular users to questions is much lower, and it's actually practical to critique the quesitons of everyone asking for it. If this does happen though you'd need to be sure to not show the link to new users if the chatroom has no mentors in it, because in a smaller site there might not be mentors there 24/7.

I see two possible outcomes of this:

  1. Very, very few people actually use the feature, because they're just here to ask their question, not to chat with people about how to ask their question. If this happens, the feature hasn't actually accomplished much of anything, even if those few people actually get good feedback. The problems you laid out will still be happening about as frequently as they're happening now.

  2. Lots of people use it; a significant enough portion of the people asking questions actually use this to help them ask better question. The end result, the chat room is unusable because there are too many people talking over each other, and nobody can follow what's being said, and also there will be so many more people asking for help than there will be people willing/able to help them that only a very small portion of the people asking questions actually get help, and those that do get help will tend to get more superficial help, and not get significant amounts of feedback, because the people helping them will be in such a hurry to get to the other people looking to get help.

Now that doesn't mean that the feature will be net harmful as a result of this, so it doesn't mean that this alone is reason to not do it, but I'd say it has a very low ceiling as far as possible benefits.

Honestly this feature seems about as useful as people just asking on meta when they want help critiquing a question they have (either one already posted, or one not yet posted), which is to say that it works great in very small numbers, but just doesn't scale up.

I see two possible outcomes of this:

  1. Very, very few people actually use the feature, because they're just here to ask their question, not to chat with people about how to ask their question. If this happens, the feature hasn't actually accomplished much of anything, even if those few people actually get good feedback. The problems you laid out will still be happening about as frequently as they're happening now.

  2. Lots of people use it; a significant enough portion of the people asking questions actually use this to help them ask better question. The end result, the chat room is unusable because there are too many people talking over each other, and nobody can follow what's being said, and also there will be so many more people asking for help than there will be people willing/able to help them that only a very small portion of the people asking questions actually get help, and those that do get help will tend to get more superficial help, and not get significant amounts of feedback, because the people helping them will be in such a hurry to get to the other people looking to get help.

Now that doesn't mean that the feature will be net harmful as a result of this, so it doesn't mean that this alone is reason to not do it, but I'd say it has a very low ceiling as far as possible benefits.

Honestly this feature seems about as useful as people just asking on meta when they want help critiquing a question they have (either one already posted, or one not yet posted), which is to say that it works great in very small numbers, but just doesn't scale up.

This might be more likely to be a useful feature on smaller sites, rather than sites like SO, where the ratio of regular users to questions is much lower, and it's actually practical to critique the quesitons of everyone asking for it. If this does happen though you'd need to be sure to not show the link to new users if the chatroom has no mentors in it, because in a smaller site there might not be mentors there 24/7.

added 150 characters in body
Source Link
Servy
  • 203.7k
  • 105
  • 683
  • 806

I see two possible outcomes of this:

  1. Very, very few people actually use the feature, because they're just here to ask their question, not to chat with people about how to ask their question. If this happens, the feature hasn't actually accomplished much of anything, even if those few people actually get good feedback. The problems you laid out will still be happening about as frequently as they're happening now.

  2. Lots of people use it; a significant enough portion of the people asking questions actually use this to help them ask better question. The end result, the chat room is unusable because there are too many people talking over each other, and nobody can follow what's being said, and also there will be so many more people asking for help than there will be people willing/able to help them that only a very small portion of the people asking questions actually get help, and those that do get help will tend to get more superficial help, and not get significant amounts of feedback, because the people helping them will be in such a hurry to get to the other people looking to get help.

Now that doesn't mean that the feature will be net harmful as a result of this, so it doesn't mean that this alone is reason to not do it, but I'd say it has a very low ceiling as far as possible benefits.

Honestly this feature seems about as useful as people just asking on meta when they want help critiquing a question they have (either one already posted, or one not yet posted), which is to say that it works great in very small numbers, but just doesn't scale up.

I see two possible outcomes of this:

  1. Very, very few people actually use the feature, because they're just here to ask their question, not to chat with people about how to ask their question. If this happens, the feature hasn't actually accomplished much of anything.

  2. Lots of people use it; a significant enough portion of the people asking questions actually use this to help them ask better question. The end result, the chat room is unusable because there are too many people talking over each other, and nobody can follow what's being said, and also there will be so many more people asking for help than there will be people willing/able to help them that only a very small portion of the people asking questions actually get help, and those that do get help will tend to get more superficial help, and not get significant amounts of feedback, because the people helping them will be in such a hurry to get to the other people looking to get help.

Now that doesn't mean that the feature will be net harmful as a result of this, so it doesn't mean that this alone is reason to not do it, but I'd say it has a very low ceiling as far as possible benefits.

Honestly this feature seems about as useful as people just asking on meta when they want help critiquing a question they have (either one already posted, or one not yet posted), which is to say that it works great in very small numbers, but just doesn't scale up.

I see two possible outcomes of this:

  1. Very, very few people actually use the feature, because they're just here to ask their question, not to chat with people about how to ask their question. If this happens, the feature hasn't actually accomplished much of anything, even if those few people actually get good feedback. The problems you laid out will still be happening about as frequently as they're happening now.

  2. Lots of people use it; a significant enough portion of the people asking questions actually use this to help them ask better question. The end result, the chat room is unusable because there are too many people talking over each other, and nobody can follow what's being said, and also there will be so many more people asking for help than there will be people willing/able to help them that only a very small portion of the people asking questions actually get help, and those that do get help will tend to get more superficial help, and not get significant amounts of feedback, because the people helping them will be in such a hurry to get to the other people looking to get help.

Now that doesn't mean that the feature will be net harmful as a result of this, so it doesn't mean that this alone is reason to not do it, but I'd say it has a very low ceiling as far as possible benefits.

Honestly this feature seems about as useful as people just asking on meta when they want help critiquing a question they have (either one already posted, or one not yet posted), which is to say that it works great in very small numbers, but just doesn't scale up.

Source Link
Servy
  • 203.7k
  • 105
  • 683
  • 806

I see two possible outcomes of this:

  1. Very, very few people actually use the feature, because they're just here to ask their question, not to chat with people about how to ask their question. If this happens, the feature hasn't actually accomplished much of anything.

  2. Lots of people use it; a significant enough portion of the people asking questions actually use this to help them ask better question. The end result, the chat room is unusable because there are too many people talking over each other, and nobody can follow what's being said, and also there will be so many more people asking for help than there will be people willing/able to help them that only a very small portion of the people asking questions actually get help, and those that do get help will tend to get more superficial help, and not get significant amounts of feedback, because the people helping them will be in such a hurry to get to the other people looking to get help.

Now that doesn't mean that the feature will be net harmful as a result of this, so it doesn't mean that this alone is reason to not do it, but I'd say it has a very low ceiling as far as possible benefits.

Honestly this feature seems about as useful as people just asking on meta when they want help critiquing a question they have (either one already posted, or one not yet posted), which is to say that it works great in very small numbers, but just doesn't scale up.