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baao
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That's just another case of SO trying to blame the community, this time with other words. The site is solely run by the community, so the headline alone is a accusation of every single user.

Stack Overflow Isn’t Very Welcoming. It’s Time for That to Change

A few lines later, the blog post tells us about the one and only action SO has already started to take about this topic:

Let’s do something about comments. Condescension and sarcasm have been reluctantly tolerated in comments for too long. We’ll research possible feature changes, but let’s start by working with the community and our community managers to start flagging and deleting unkind comments now.

Again, it's the bad community that is hostile, but the good samaritan SO has started flagging and deleting those comments.

I ignore the fact that the blog post is, indeed, racist, anti-women and against every user from a minority. I'm in the minority too, English isn't my first language and I'm sure there are plenty of grammatical errors in this post too. Still, somehow I managed to read the help center before I started using SO, my first post on SO got an upvote and I had 2 or 3 downvoted questions in total, out of over 100. I wrote my first ever line of code 2 months before my first question on SO. So, out of personal experience, calling the reason for low quality content is being from a minority that doesn't speak perfect English or is new to coding, is ridiculous.


The only problem that exists is, that SO constantly tries to optimize the site only to attract new people to ask questions. Look at the new navbar, and how SO defended that horrible thing - a lot of defense came from:

but it attracts new users to ask a question

Then there was plenty of discussion about the "ask a question" template. You could formerly smell the fear that a single user stops to ask a question because it was too complicated to do so.

But improving that and making it complicated to ask a new question would be the only way to make SO a welcoming place. Every single question on SO, from whoever with whatever background, is well received, upvoted and most likely perfectly answered; as long as it's a good question, following the standards of the site.

I also don't share the fear that new users would stop asking if it's complicated to ask. Yes - we would lose all those "it isn't working questions" with no code by someone who doesn't give a ..., but we wouldn't lose a single high quality question by someone who really has a problem and needs help with it. Someone in this situation is willing (maybe after being forced to) to read the help center, because it's well known that the community of SO is the best option for help with programming questions. For everyone who has the respect to follow some simple but sensible rules.

That's just another case of SO trying to blame the community, this time with other words. The site is solely run by the community, so the headline alone is a accusation of every single user.

Stack Overflow Isn’t Very Welcoming. It’s Time for That to Change

A few lines later, the blog post tells us about the one and only action SO has already started to take about this topic:

Let’s do something about comments. Condescension and sarcasm have been reluctantly tolerated in comments for too long. We’ll research possible feature changes, but let’s start by working with the community and our community managers to start flagging and deleting unkind comments now.

Again, it's the bad community that is hostile, but the good samaritan SO has started flagging and deleting those comments.

I ignore the fact that the blog post is, indeed, racist, anti-women and against every user from a minority. I'm in the minority too, English isn't my first language and I'm sure there are plenty of grammatical errors in this post too. Still, somehow I managed to read the help center before I started using SO, my first post on SO got an upvote and I had 2 or 3 downvoted questions in total, out of over 100. I wrote my first ever line of code 2 months before my first question on SO. So, out of personal experience, calling the reason for low quality content is being from a minority that doesn't speak perfect English or is new to coding, is ridiculous.


The only problem that exists is, that SO constantly tries to optimize the site only to attract new people to ask questions. Look at the new navbar, and how SO defended that horrible thing - a lot of defense came from:

but it attracts new users to ask a question

Then there was plenty of discussion about the "ask a question" template. You could formerly smell the fear that a single user stops to ask a question because it was too complicated to do so.

But improving that and making it complicated to ask a new question would be the only way to make SO a welcoming place. Every single question on SO, from whoever with whatever background, is well received, upvoted and most likely perfectly answered; as long as it's a good question, following the standards of the site.

I also don't share the fear that new users would stop asking if it's complicated to ask. Yes - we would lose all those "it isn't working questions" with no code by someone who doesn't give a ..., but we wouldn't lose a single high quality question by someone who really has a problem and needs help with it. Someone in this situation is willing (maybe after being forced to) to read the help center, because it's well known that the community of SO is the best option for help with programming questions. For everyone who has the respect to follow some simple but sensible rules.

That's just another case of SO trying to blame the community, this time with other words. The site is solely run by the community, so the headline alone is a accusation of every single user.

Stack Overflow Isn’t Very Welcoming. It’s Time for That to Change

A few lines later, the blog post tells us about the one and only action SO has already started to take about this topic:

Let’s do something about comments. Condescension and sarcasm have been reluctantly tolerated in comments for too long. We’ll research possible feature changes, but let’s start by working with the community and our community managers to start flagging and deleting unkind comments now.

Again, it's the bad community that is hostile, but the good samaritan SO has started flagging and deleting those comments.

I ignore the fact that the blog post is, indeed, racist, anti-women and against every user from a minority. I'm in the minority too, English isn't my first language and I'm sure there are plenty of grammatical errors in this post too. Still, somehow I managed to read the help center before I started using SO, my first post on SO got an upvote and I had 2 or 3 downvoted questions in total, out of over 100. So, out of personal experience, calling the reason for low quality content is being from a minority that doesn't speak perfect English, is ridiculous.


The only problem that exists is, that SO constantly tries to optimize the site only to attract new people to ask questions. Look at the new navbar, and how SO defended that horrible thing - a lot of defense came from:

but it attracts new users to ask a question

Then there was plenty of discussion about the "ask a question" template. You could formerly smell the fear that a single user stops to ask a question because it was too complicated to do so.

But improving that and making it complicated to ask a new question would be the only way to make SO a welcoming place. Every single question on SO, from whoever with whatever background, is well received, upvoted and most likely perfectly answered; as long as it's a good question, following the standards of the site.

I also don't share the fear that new users would stop asking if it's complicated to ask. Yes - we would lose all those "it isn't working questions" with no code by someone who doesn't give a ..., but we wouldn't lose a single high quality question by someone who really has a problem and needs help with it. Someone in this situation is willing (maybe after being forced to) to read the help center, because it's well known that the community of SO is the best option for help with programming questions. For everyone who has the respect to follow some simple but sensible rules.

added 96 characters in body
Source Link
baao
  • 73.1k
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That's just another case of SO trying to blame the community, this time with other words. The site is solely run by the community, so the headline alone is a accusation of every single user.

Stack Overflow Isn’t Very Welcoming. It’s Time for That to Change

A few lines later, the blog post tells us about the one and only action SO has already started to take about this topic:

Let’s do something about comments. Condescension and sarcasm have been reluctantly tolerated in comments for too long. We’ll research possible feature changes, but let’s start by working with the community and our community managers to start flagging and deleting unkind comments now.

Again, it's the bad community that is hostile, but the good samaritan SO has started flagging and deleting those comments.

I ignore the fact that the blog post is, indeed, racist, anti-women and against every user from a minority. I'm in the minority too, English isn't my first language and I'm sure there are plenty of grammatical errors in this post too. Still, somehow I managed to read the help center before I started using SO, my first post on SO got an upvote and I had 2 or 3 downvoted questions in total, out of over 100. I wrote my first ever line of code 2 months before my first question on SO. So, out of personal experience, calling the reason for low quality content is being from a minority that doesn't speak perfect English or is new to coding, is ridiculous.


The only problem that exists is, that SO constantly tries to optimize the site only to attract new people to ask questions. Look at the new navbar, and how SO defended that horrible thing - a lot of defense came from:

but it attracts new users to ask a question

Then there was plenty of discussion about the "ask a question" template. You could formerly smell the fear that a single user stops to ask a question because it was too complicated to do so.

But improving that and making it complicated to ask a new question would be the only way to make SO a welcoming place. Every single question on SO, from whoever with whatever background, is well received, upvoted and most likely perfectly answered; as long as it's a good question, following the standards of the site.

I also don't share the fear that new users would stop asking if it's complicated to ask. Yes - we would lose all those "it isn't working questions" with no code by someone who doesn't give a ..., but we wouldn't lose a single high quality question by someone who really has a problem and needs help with it. Someone in this situation is willing (maybe after being forced to) to read the help center, because it's well known that the community of SO is the best option for help with programming questions. For everyone who has the respect to follow some simple but sensible rules.

That's just another case of SO trying to blame the community, this time with other words. The site is solely run by the community, so the headline alone is a accusation of every single user.

Stack Overflow Isn’t Very Welcoming. It’s Time for That to Change

A few lines later, the blog post tells us about the one and only action SO has already started to take about this topic:

Let’s do something about comments. Condescension and sarcasm have been reluctantly tolerated in comments for too long. We’ll research possible feature changes, but let’s start by working with the community and our community managers to start flagging and deleting unkind comments now.

Again, it's the bad community that is hostile, but the good samaritan SO has started flagging and deleting those comments.

I ignore the fact that the blog post is, indeed, racist, anti-women and against every user from a minority. I'm in the minority too, English isn't my first language and I'm sure there are plenty of grammatical errors in this post too. Still, somehow I managed to read the help center before I started using SO, my first post on SO got an upvote and I had 2 or 3 downvoted questions in total, out of over 100. So, out of personal experience, calling the reason for low quality content is being from a minority that doesn't speak perfect English, is ridiculous.


The only problem that exists is, that SO constantly tries to optimize the site only to attract new people to ask questions. Look at the new navbar, and how SO defended that horrible thing - a lot of defense came from:

but it attracts new users to ask a question

Then there was plenty of discussion about the "ask a question" template. You could formerly smell the fear that a single user stops to ask a question because it was too complicated to do so.

But improving that and making it complicated to ask a new question would be the only way to make SO a welcoming place. Every single question on SO, from whoever with whatever background, is well received, upvoted and most likely perfectly answered; as long as it's a good question, following the standards of the site.

I also don't share the fear that new users would stop asking if it's complicated to ask. Yes - we would lose all those "it isn't working questions" with no code by someone who doesn't give a ..., but we wouldn't lose a single high quality question by someone who really has a problem and needs help with it. Someone in this situation is willing (maybe after being forced to) to read the help center, because it's well known that the community of SO is the best option for help with programming questions. For everyone who has the respect to follow some simple but sensible rules.

That's just another case of SO trying to blame the community, this time with other words. The site is solely run by the community, so the headline alone is a accusation of every single user.

Stack Overflow Isn’t Very Welcoming. It’s Time for That to Change

A few lines later, the blog post tells us about the one and only action SO has already started to take about this topic:

Let’s do something about comments. Condescension and sarcasm have been reluctantly tolerated in comments for too long. We’ll research possible feature changes, but let’s start by working with the community and our community managers to start flagging and deleting unkind comments now.

Again, it's the bad community that is hostile, but the good samaritan SO has started flagging and deleting those comments.

I ignore the fact that the blog post is, indeed, racist, anti-women and against every user from a minority. I'm in the minority too, English isn't my first language and I'm sure there are plenty of grammatical errors in this post too. Still, somehow I managed to read the help center before I started using SO, my first post on SO got an upvote and I had 2 or 3 downvoted questions in total, out of over 100. I wrote my first ever line of code 2 months before my first question on SO. So, out of personal experience, calling the reason for low quality content is being from a minority that doesn't speak perfect English or is new to coding, is ridiculous.


The only problem that exists is, that SO constantly tries to optimize the site only to attract new people to ask questions. Look at the new navbar, and how SO defended that horrible thing - a lot of defense came from:

but it attracts new users to ask a question

Then there was plenty of discussion about the "ask a question" template. You could formerly smell the fear that a single user stops to ask a question because it was too complicated to do so.

But improving that and making it complicated to ask a new question would be the only way to make SO a welcoming place. Every single question on SO, from whoever with whatever background, is well received, upvoted and most likely perfectly answered; as long as it's a good question, following the standards of the site.

I also don't share the fear that new users would stop asking if it's complicated to ask. Yes - we would lose all those "it isn't working questions" with no code by someone who doesn't give a ..., but we wouldn't lose a single high quality question by someone who really has a problem and needs help with it. Someone in this situation is willing (maybe after being forced to) to read the help center, because it's well known that the community of SO is the best option for help with programming questions. For everyone who has the respect to follow some simple but sensible rules.

Active reading.
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Peter Mortensen
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That's just another case of SO trying to blame the community, this time with other words. The site is solely run by the community, so the headline alone is a accusation of every single user.

Stack Overflow Isn’t Very Welcoming. It’s Time for That to Change

A few lines later, the blog post tells us about the one and only action SO has already started to take about this topic:

Let’s do something about comments. Condescension and sarcasm have been reluctantly tolerated in comments for too long. We’ll research possible feature changes, but let’s start by working with the community and our community managers to start flagging and deleting unkind comments now.

Again, it's the bad community that is hostile, but the good samaritan SO has started flagging and deleting those comments.

I ignore the fact that the blog post is, indeed, racist, anti-women and against every user from a minority. I'm in the minority too, English isn't my first language and I'm sure there are plenty of grammatical errors in this post too. Still, somehow I managed to read the help center before I started using SO, my first post on SO got an upvote and I had 2 or 3 downvoted questions in total, out of over 100. So, out of personal experience, calling the reason for low quality content is being from a minority that doesn't speak perfect englishEnglish, is ridiculous.


The only problem that exists is, that SO constantly tries to optimize the site only to attract new people to ask questions. Look at the new navbar, and how SO defended that horrible thing - a lot of defense came from:

but it attracts new users to ask a question

Then there was plenty of discussion about the "ask a question" template. You could formerly smell the fear that a single user stops to ask a question because it was too complicated to do so.

But improving that and making it complicated to ask a new question would be the only way to make SO a welcoming place. Every single question on SO, from whoever with whatever background, is well received, upvoted and most likely perfectly answered; as long as it's a good question, following the standards of the site.

I also don't share the fear that new users would stop asking if it's complicated to ask. Yes - we would lose all those "it isn't working questions" with no code by someone who doesn't give a ..., but we wouldn't lose a single high quality question by someone who really has a problem and needs help with it. Someone in this situation is willing (maybe after being forced to) to read the help center, because it's well known that the community of SO is the best option for help with programming questions. For everyone who has the respect to follow some simple but sensible rules.

That's just another case of SO trying to blame the community, this time with other words. The site is solely run by the community, so the headline alone is a accusation of every single user.

Stack Overflow Isn’t Very Welcoming. It’s Time for That to Change

A few lines later, the blog tells us about the one and only action SO has already started to take about this topic

Let’s do something about comments. Condescension and sarcasm have been reluctantly tolerated in comments for too long. We’ll research possible feature changes, but let’s start by working with the community and our community managers to start flagging and deleting unkind comments now.

Again, it's the bad community that is hostile, but the good samaritan SO has started flagging and deleting those comments.

I ignore the fact that the blog post is, indeed, racist, anti-women and against every user from a minority. I'm in the minority too, English isn't my first language and I'm sure there are plenty of grammatical errors in this post too. Still, somehow I managed to read the help center before I started using SO, my first post on SO got an upvote and I had 2 or 3 downvoted questions in total, out of over 100. So, out of personal experience, calling the reason for low quality content is being from a minority that doesn't speak perfect english, is ridiculous.


The only problem that exists is, that SO constantly tries to optimize the site only to attract new people to ask questions. Look at the new navbar, and how SO defended that horrible thing - a lot of defense came from

but it attracts new users to ask a question

Then there was plenty discussion about the "ask a question" template. You could formerly smell the fear that a single user stops to ask a question because it was too complicated to do so.

But improving that and making it complicated to ask a new question would be the only way to make SO a welcoming place. Every single question on SO, from whoever with whatever background, is well received, upvoted and most likely perfectly answered; as long as it's a good question, following the standards of the site.

I also don't share the fear that new users would stop asking if it's complicated to ask. Yes - we would lose all those "it isn't working questions" with no code by someone who doesn't give a ..., but we wouldn't lose a single high quality question by someone who really has a problem and needs help with it. Someone in this situation is willing (maybe after being forced to) to read the help center, because it's well known that the community of SO is the best option for help with programming questions. For everyone who has the respect to follow some simple but sensible rules.

That's just another case of SO trying to blame the community, this time with other words. The site is solely run by the community, so the headline alone is a accusation of every single user.

Stack Overflow Isn’t Very Welcoming. It’s Time for That to Change

A few lines later, the blog post tells us about the one and only action SO has already started to take about this topic:

Let’s do something about comments. Condescension and sarcasm have been reluctantly tolerated in comments for too long. We’ll research possible feature changes, but let’s start by working with the community and our community managers to start flagging and deleting unkind comments now.

Again, it's the bad community that is hostile, but the good samaritan SO has started flagging and deleting those comments.

I ignore the fact that the blog post is, indeed, racist, anti-women and against every user from a minority. I'm in the minority too, English isn't my first language and I'm sure there are plenty of grammatical errors in this post too. Still, somehow I managed to read the help center before I started using SO, my first post on SO got an upvote and I had 2 or 3 downvoted questions in total, out of over 100. So, out of personal experience, calling the reason for low quality content is being from a minority that doesn't speak perfect English, is ridiculous.


The only problem that exists is, that SO constantly tries to optimize the site only to attract new people to ask questions. Look at the new navbar, and how SO defended that horrible thing - a lot of defense came from:

but it attracts new users to ask a question

Then there was plenty of discussion about the "ask a question" template. You could formerly smell the fear that a single user stops to ask a question because it was too complicated to do so.

But improving that and making it complicated to ask a new question would be the only way to make SO a welcoming place. Every single question on SO, from whoever with whatever background, is well received, upvoted and most likely perfectly answered; as long as it's a good question, following the standards of the site.

I also don't share the fear that new users would stop asking if it's complicated to ask. Yes - we would lose all those "it isn't working questions" with no code by someone who doesn't give a ..., but we wouldn't lose a single high quality question by someone who really has a problem and needs help with it. Someone in this situation is willing (maybe after being forced to) to read the help center, because it's well known that the community of SO is the best option for help with programming questions. For everyone who has the respect to follow some simple but sensible rules.

minor spelling/grammar fixes
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Suraj Rao
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baao
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baao
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baao
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