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Lundin
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What makes you think that post quality has any relation to the CoC changes in the first place? Voting should hopefully reflect post quality and nothing else. While the CoC changes were almost exclusively about the content of comments, once a question has already been posted.

Voting patterns change over time regardless of blogs and CoC. It is well-known among veteran users that SO has a dip in quality whenever schools start or have exams. It seems to me that the negative score graph is mostly a graph over when most schools have vacation. Turns out that's in the summer. A comparison against previous years is obviously needed.


Overall, I would like to see more use of the scientific method. Establish a hypothesis, explain why it is a sound one to begin with, then describe why the methods to verify it make sense. Question your own hypothesis and results, apply critical thinking.

It gets tiresome when SO keeps publishing what's actually just loose theories as "science". Some of the past articles like for example the "every programming technology older than a few year is in decline" were very poor, because it looked at percentage of total rather than amount of questions asked. Yet people don't question them but keep spreading them over the internet as facts.

If you call yourself scientist and these publications science, then prepare to be judged by the quality standards you have set yourself.

What is for example the rationale offor using a scale with 1.5 months per square in a graph? What does 7/60 days after posting relate to in the graph - does it show the score of the post 7 days after it was posted? As in, what we see for July 1st actually happened June 23th and May 1st? Or is it showing score of what the post posted at July 1st would get in the future? It would seem that the second version is true? A bit confusing. At any rate, I'm having a hard time applying 7/60 days units to the 1.5 month scale, to for example determine if the post time was made 60 days before school exams.

What makes you think that post quality has any relation to the CoC changes in the first place? Voting should hopefully reflect post quality and nothing else. While the CoC changes were almost exclusively about the content of comments, once a question has already been posted.

Voting patterns change over time regardless of blogs and CoC. It is well-known among veteran users that SO has a dip in quality whenever schools start or have exams. It seems to me that the negative score graph is mostly a graph over when most schools have vacation. Turns out that's in the summer. A comparison against previous years is obviously needed.


Overall, I would like to see more use of the scientific method. Establish a hypothesis, explain why it is a sound one to begin with, then describe why the methods to verify it make sense. Question your own hypothesis and results, apply critical thinking.

It gets tiresome when SO keeps publishing what's actually just loose theories as "science". Some of the past articles like for example the "every programming technology older than a few year is in decline" were very poor, because it looked at percentage of total rather than amount of questions asked. Yet people don't question them but keep spreading them over the internet as facts.

If you call yourself scientist and these publications science, then prepare to be judged by the quality standards you have set yourself.

What is for example the rationale of using a scale with 1.5 months per square in a graph? What does 7/60 days after posting relate to in the graph - does it show the score of the post 7 days after it was posted? As in, what we see for July 1st actually happened June 23th and May 1st? Or is it showing score of what the post posted at July 1st would get in the future? It would seem that the second version is true? A bit confusing. At any rate, I'm having a hard time applying 7/60 days units to the 1.5 month scale, to for example determine if the post time was made 60 days before school exams.

What makes you think that post quality has any relation to the CoC changes in the first place? Voting should hopefully reflect post quality and nothing else. While the CoC changes were almost exclusively about the content of comments, once a question has already been posted.

Voting patterns change over time regardless of blogs and CoC. It is well-known among veteran users that SO has a dip in quality whenever schools start or have exams. It seems to me that the negative score graph is mostly a graph over when most schools have vacation. Turns out that's in the summer. A comparison against previous years is obviously needed.


Overall, I would like to see more use of the scientific method. Establish a hypothesis, explain why it is a sound one to begin with, then describe why the methods to verify it make sense. Question your own hypothesis and results, apply critical thinking.

It gets tiresome when SO keeps publishing what's actually just loose theories as "science". Some of the past articles like for example the "every programming technology older than a few year is in decline" were very poor, because it looked at percentage of total rather than amount of questions asked. Yet people don't question them but keep spreading them over the internet as facts.

If you call yourself scientist and these publications science, then prepare to be judged by the quality standards you have set yourself.

What is for example the rationale for using a scale with 1.5 months per square in a graph? What does 7/60 days after posting relate to in the graph - does it show the score of the post 7 days after it was posted? As in, what we see for July 1st actually happened June 23th and May 1st? Or is it showing score of what the post posted at July 1st would get in the future? It would seem that the second version is true? A bit confusing. At any rate, I'm having a hard time applying 7/60 days units to the 1.5 month scale, to for example determine if the post time was made 60 days before school exams.

added 1331 characters in body
Source Link
Lundin
  • 211.8k
  • 14
  • 147
  • 243

What makes you think that post quality has any relation to the CoC changes in the first place? Voting should hopefully reflect post quality and nothing else. While the CoC changes were almost exclusively about the content of comments, once a question has already been posted.

Voting patterns change over time regardless of blogs and CoC. It is well-known among veteran users that SO has a dip in quality whenever schools start or have exams. It seems to me that the negative score graph is mostly a graph over when most schools have vacation. Turns out that's in the summer. A comparison against previous years is obviously needed.

 

Overall, I would like to see more use of the scientific method. Establish a hypothesis, explain why it is a sound one to begin with, then describe why the methods to verify it make sense. Question your own hypothesis and results, apply critical thinking.

It gets tiresome when SO keeps publishing what's actually just loose theories as "science". Some of the past articles like for example the "every programming technology older than a few year is in decline" were very poor, because it looked at percentage of total rather than amount of questions asked. Yet people don't question them but keep spreading them over the internet as facts.

If you call yourself scientist and these publications science, then prepare to be judged by the quality standards you have set yourself.

What is for example the rationale of using a scale with 1.5 months per square in a graph? What does 7/60 days after posting relate to in the graph - does it show the score of the post 7 days after it was posted? As in, what we see for July 1st actually happened June 23th and May 1st? Or is it showing score of what the post posted at July 1st would get in the future? It would seem that the second version is true? A bit confusing. At any rate, I'm having a hard time applying 7/60 days units to the 1.5 month scale, to for example determine if the post time was made 60 days before school exams.

What makes you think that post quality has any relation to the CoC changes in the first place? Voting should hopefully reflect post quality and nothing else. While the CoC changes were almost exclusively about the content of comments, once a question has already been posted.

Voting patterns change over time regardless of blogs and CoC. It is well-known among veteran users that SO has a dip in quality whenever schools start or have exams. It seems to me that the negative score graph is mostly a graph over when most schools have vacation. Turns out that's in the summer. A comparison against previous years is obviously needed.

Overall, I would like to see more use of the scientific method.

What makes you think that post quality has any relation to the CoC changes in the first place? Voting should hopefully reflect post quality and nothing else. While the CoC changes were almost exclusively about the content of comments, once a question has already been posted.

Voting patterns change over time regardless of blogs and CoC. It is well-known among veteran users that SO has a dip in quality whenever schools start or have exams. It seems to me that the negative score graph is mostly a graph over when most schools have vacation. Turns out that's in the summer. A comparison against previous years is obviously needed.

 

Overall, I would like to see more use of the scientific method. Establish a hypothesis, explain why it is a sound one to begin with, then describe why the methods to verify it make sense. Question your own hypothesis and results, apply critical thinking.

It gets tiresome when SO keeps publishing what's actually just loose theories as "science". Some of the past articles like for example the "every programming technology older than a few year is in decline" were very poor, because it looked at percentage of total rather than amount of questions asked. Yet people don't question them but keep spreading them over the internet as facts.

If you call yourself scientist and these publications science, then prepare to be judged by the quality standards you have set yourself.

What is for example the rationale of using a scale with 1.5 months per square in a graph? What does 7/60 days after posting relate to in the graph - does it show the score of the post 7 days after it was posted? As in, what we see for July 1st actually happened June 23th and May 1st? Or is it showing score of what the post posted at July 1st would get in the future? It would seem that the second version is true? A bit confusing. At any rate, I'm having a hard time applying 7/60 days units to the 1.5 month scale, to for example determine if the post time was made 60 days before school exams.

Source Link
Lundin
  • 211.8k
  • 14
  • 147
  • 243

What makes you think that post quality has any relation to the CoC changes in the first place? Voting should hopefully reflect post quality and nothing else. While the CoC changes were almost exclusively about the content of comments, once a question has already been posted.

Voting patterns change over time regardless of blogs and CoC. It is well-known among veteran users that SO has a dip in quality whenever schools start or have exams. It seems to me that the negative score graph is mostly a graph over when most schools have vacation. Turns out that's in the summer. A comparison against previous years is obviously needed.

Overall, I would like to see more use of the scientific method.