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Feb 21, 2020 at 15:21 comment added user56reinstatemonica8 The strangest thing about the negative reaction is, it would immediately take some questions that need work off the homepage, away from users fed up of such questions, for opt-in users to fix (I'd have opted in, it's much like what I did on other SE sites). Those questions would only hit the homepage if/when they become high quality. But that's still a bad thing, because conscientious new users who want to ask questions right so much they explicitly ask for help might succeed? It honestly looks like a knee-jerk "New users, boo!", or even "Keep failing, we enjoy the rage!"
May 2, 2018 at 15:19 comment added Ajedi32 It's not the absence of niceness that's making me explode here, it's the overlap between people complaining about problems, and people shooting down every solution that's offered because it "might not work" or it might not work "perfectly. I've noticed this seems to happen to often on any significant change to site behavior that gets proposed on meta, related to "be nice" or not. Someone proposes an idea, then someone else comes up with a way it might hypothetically not work, and that's the end of the discussion. There's rarely a chance to improve the proposal or A/B test, etc.
May 2, 2018 at 12:29 comment added duplode "Yeah, well maybe in parallel we should be drawing up a list of other resources we can point people to?" -- Yup. It sounds plausible that folks who sign up to be guides would be aware of which discussion venues about the tags they are active in would receive well and produce useful answers to library recommendation questions, newbie code review questions, interesting opinion-based questions, etc.
May 2, 2018 at 8:30 history answered Benjol CC BY-SA 4.0