Timeline for The Ask Question Wizard (2018) is Live!
Current License: CC BY-SA 4.0
17 events
when toggle format | what | by | license | comment | |
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May 2, 2019 at 8:48 | comment | added | Muz | Came here to agree with this. I just starting posting a question and I felt that guided mode was horrible and awkward. I had a question that was downvoted to -15 and honestly I don't think this would have helped at all. I guess this design decision killed a lot of my faith in SO, if things really are that bad. I miss the days when the site was more like a wiki, a form of crowdsourced documentation. | |
Mar 27, 2019 at 5:11 | comment | added | BJ Myers | My opinion on this isn't quite as strong as Mark's, but I've started to see questions like this one that clearly went through the wizard, and may have become worse as a result. | |
Mar 26, 2019 at 18:36 | comment | added | Mark Amery | @TravisJ Note that to even get the option of switching out of guided mode, the user needs to have already selected a category and seen the guidance about it. For anything other than a homework problem or a question "about some code", it will tell them that they should only continue asking their question if it includes code. Plenty of good questions do not include code, but law-abiding new askers who want to ask them will be presented with instructions to not do so. That, I expect, will do more harm to us than a 5% sewage reduction does good. | |
Mar 26, 2019 at 18:32 | comment | added | Mark Amery | @TravisJ Our core disagreement then is perhaps not one of values but one of predictions. I expect the diamond earrings to get caught in the filter all the time - in fact, for the filter to extract a much bigger percentage of all the earrings than it does of the sewage. The trouble is that I expect skilled writers with interesting questions to disproportionately be conscientious, rule-following people. And I expect such people to be deterred when we present them with a wizard with instructions that suggest that their question doesn't belong, even if we don't outright block them. | |
Mar 26, 2019 at 17:50 | comment | added | Travis J | @MarkAmery - What a great analogy. So, in this magical river, there is 99.999% sewage, and randomly a diamond is somehow attached to an earring somewhere floating near the bottom. The sewage contains all sorts of filth, sometimes even dead animals. All this does is put in a very generous filter to only catch the dead animals. The earring will never hit it. If a user is highly proficient in asking and technical writing, they will switch out of guided mode. | |
Mar 26, 2019 at 9:44 | comment | added | Mark Amery | @TravisJ The feature may aim at preventing questions that should not have been posted, but it actually prevents anything that isn't a debugging question. Your view that anything that reduces the amount of bad questions must be good is blinkered, and exactly what I'm attacking. When a magical river of sewage and diamonds is running into your garden, and someone puts up a sign that says "Please refine your sewage before pouring; also, no diamond throwing", you don't accept the sign did good because it caused a 5% reduction in raw sewage. The sewage is unimportant. What about the diamonds? | |
Mar 26, 2019 at 7:23 | comment | added | BoltClock Mod | I agree with Cody. I think this is a case of it being the lesser of two evils. | |
Mar 25, 2019 at 21:08 | comment | added | Cody Gray Mod | Mark, although I missed participating in the previous discussions, I'm very sympathetic to your concerns. I understand that with a wizard like this, we are essentially optimizing for passable "debug my code" questions. On the other hand, experience tells us that giving people a blank textbox and expecting them to draft a coherent question is not likely to be successful. And since "debug my code" is the most common type of questions from beginners, a bit of hand-holding to improve their quality seems like a reasonable first step. Our library of knowledge is becoming a dumping ground. | |
Mar 25, 2019 at 20:33 | comment | added | TylerH | Asking thoughtful, widely-applicable questions isn't something you can make happen with some handholding, nor is it a common occurrence (otherwise "great" would be "mediocre"). I think this concern should be focused on ways the wizard prevents such questions from being asked rather than complaining that the wizard doesn't "encourage" such questions. Or perhaps your concerns should be addressed to primary/secondary school teachers across the globe who can do something about peoples' ability to think critically/at a high intellectual level, rather than here, far too far down the road. | |
Mar 25, 2019 at 20:18 | comment | added | fbueckert | @Makoto No issues there. Auditable data is a must to see how much of an impact it's having. It's just my opinion that a ~12% decrease in low quality doesn't do much but extend the period until curators burn out. | |
Mar 25, 2019 at 20:12 | comment | added | Makoto | @fbueckert: I don't think we can objectively prove one way or the other if it is a dam or not. I don't think it is either, honestly, but if you're expressing those as goals, we should be able to verify one over the other. | |
Mar 25, 2019 at 20:07 | comment | added | fbueckert | @Makoto Do we need a dam? Sure. I just don't think the Ask Question wizard is one, so I'm comparing what I see as the two potential scenarios. | |
Mar 25, 2019 at 20:05 | comment | added | Travis J | In my opinion, this analysis is looking on the wrong side of the issue. You are examining questions which are posted by using this feature. First, those questions would have been posted anyway, so I disagree that improving them in any fashion is a loss. Second, and most important, this feature aims at preventing questions which should not have been posted by showing at least somewhat of a framework that needs to be completed in order to ask. Any percent gain of prevention by forcing users to at least consider the amount of work necessary to post will be beneficial. | |
Mar 25, 2019 at 20:04 | comment | added | Makoto | To your point about statistics, Mark - if we have something objectively measurable, then we can go back to the PMs and identify the pain points of the site in terms they can understand. Nobody wants to expend development resources for marginal gain, and I get the impression that their numbers would hold a better conversation than either of us. | |
Mar 25, 2019 at 20:02 | comment | added | Makoto | @fbueckert: Curators don't need a "break" from the flood. They need a dam. If a feature like this can only prove that this is providing a break, what would happen next? | |
Mar 25, 2019 at 19:57 | comment | added | fbueckert | I'm...at odds with how to respond to this feedback. On one hand, yes, it does pigeonhole askers into a more guided way of asking a question, and that can lead to situations where some askers will be driven away due to the messaging we have for new users. On the other, we're starting to stem the tide of crap flowing in, something that's sorely needed. I guess the question is, what's more important? Potential askers not asking due to messaging? Or curators sorely needing a break from the flood? It seems to be six of one, and half a dozen of another. | |
Mar 25, 2019 at 19:45 | history | answered | Mark Amery | CC BY-SA 4.0 |