Skip to main content
added 622 characters in body
Source Link
rene
  • 42.3k
  • 55
  • 610
  • 777

Not Madness, Hotness.

Based on a secret formula, the question was determined "too hot to handle", so it appeared in the Hot Network Question list that is shown on every Stack Exchange site in the right sidebar. From there, it attracted lots of eyes and potential voters because HNQs are "interesting".

Votes on questions that have been in that list have to be taken with a grain of salt. Lots of grains. That advice applies network-wide.

Thanks to the dedicated work of Catija (one of the Stack Exchange Community Managers), it is now possible to determine exactly if and when a question was added to the HNQ list, because an event is generated in the question's revision history. You used to have to just guess, or maybe remember seeing it in the list.

The question became hot because it attracted in under 4 hours after posting on 2019-05-22:

  • 4 answers (2 deleted)
  • 8 upvotes (2 down)
  • 1 edit

The answers and edit put the question on top of the active tab, attracting more visitors. The 2 non-deleted answers got 16 (blame Nathan) and 5 upvotes on the 22nd.

If I run these numbers through the super secret Hotness formula I get an outcome of over 20% and based on this answer that is the threshold. Had you not answered it would have stayed just under (~19%) the threshold and we wouldn't have had this conversation.

Not Madness, Hotness.

Based on a secret formula, the question was determined "too hot to handle", so it appeared in the Hot Network Question list that is shown on every Stack Exchange site in the right sidebar. From there, it attracted lots of eyes and potential voters because HNQs are "interesting".

Votes on questions that have been in that list have to be taken with a grain of salt. Lots of grains. That advice applies network-wide.

Thanks to the dedicated work of Catija (one of the Stack Exchange Community Managers), it is now possible to determine exactly if and when a question was added to the HNQ list, because an event is generated in the question's revision history. You used to have to just guess, or maybe remember seeing it in the list.

Not Madness, Hotness.

Based on a secret formula, the question was determined "too hot to handle", so it appeared in the Hot Network Question list that is shown on every Stack Exchange site in the right sidebar. From there, it attracted lots of eyes and potential voters because HNQs are "interesting".

Votes on questions that have been in that list have to be taken with a grain of salt. Lots of grains. That advice applies network-wide.

Thanks to the dedicated work of Catija (one of the Stack Exchange Community Managers), it is now possible to determine exactly if and when a question was added to the HNQ list, because an event is generated in the question's revision history. You used to have to just guess, or maybe remember seeing it in the list.

The question became hot because it attracted in under 4 hours after posting on 2019-05-22:

  • 4 answers (2 deleted)
  • 8 upvotes (2 down)
  • 1 edit

The answers and edit put the question on top of the active tab, attracting more visitors. The 2 non-deleted answers got 16 (blame Nathan) and 5 upvotes on the 22nd.

If I run these numbers through the super secret Hotness formula I get an outcome of over 20% and based on this answer that is the threshold. Had you not answered it would have stayed just under (~19%) the threshold and we wouldn't have had this conversation.

added 516 characters in body
Source Link
Cody Gray Mod
  • 244.2k
  • 84
  • 721
  • 763

Not Madness, Hotness.

TheBased on secret formula causeda secret formula, the question became towas determined "too hot to handlehandle", so it appeared in the Hot Network Question list that is shown on every SEStack Exchange site in the right sidebar. From there, it attractsattracted lots of eyes and potential voters because HNQs are "interesting".

Votes on questions that have been in that list have to be taken with a grain of salt. Lots of grains. That advice isapplies network-wide.

Thanks to the dedicated work of Catija (one of the Stack Exchange Community Managers), it is now possible to determine exactly if and when a question was added to the HNQ list, because an event is generated in the question's revision history. You used to have to just guess, or maybe remember seeing it in the list.

Not Madness, Hotness.

The secret formula caused the question became to hot to handle so it appeared in the Hot Network Question list that is shown on every SE site in the right sidebar. From there it attracts lots of eyes and potential voters because HNQs are "interesting".

Votes on questions that have been in that list have to be taken with a grain of salt. Lots of grains. That advice is network-wide.

Not Madness, Hotness.

Based on a secret formula, the question was determined "too hot to handle", so it appeared in the Hot Network Question list that is shown on every Stack Exchange site in the right sidebar. From there, it attracted lots of eyes and potential voters because HNQs are "interesting".

Votes on questions that have been in that list have to be taken with a grain of salt. Lots of grains. That advice applies network-wide.

Thanks to the dedicated work of Catija (one of the Stack Exchange Community Managers), it is now possible to determine exactly if and when a question was added to the HNQ list, because an event is generated in the question's revision history. You used to have to just guess, or maybe remember seeing it in the list.

Source Link
rene
  • 42.3k
  • 55
  • 610
  • 777

Not Madness, Hotness.

The secret formula caused the question became to hot to handle so it appeared in the Hot Network Question list that is shown on every SE site in the right sidebar. From there it attracts lots of eyes and potential voters because HNQs are "interesting".

Votes on questions that have been in that list have to be taken with a grain of salt. Lots of grains. That advice is network-wide.