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Krupip
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I'm not sure the solution to some of these things can't directly be resolved with technology, and may not be in the domain of SO as a company.

Finding results from 9+ years ago... and then having to scroll down through answers to see who updated it based on a decade of changes. Why isn't this problem solved yet?

You can use the "Active" sorting features on answers to see answers with the latest activity. Beyond that this is not something SO really can do much about, but moderators and curators can. Bring up the specific question, maybe we need to restrict new answers, maybe we need to cull other answers, or maybe we need to create a community wiki out of the question or maybe a new question entirely needs to be made for the new version of what ever software you are using. Bring this up on meta, this is something we currently have the tools to deal with.

It's really annoying when a question title matches what I want to do perfectly but the body/answers are different.

This is also not something the SO company can do much about, this is a people problem.

If the topvoted answer accepted answer is correct, and you should never have used X, then that's on you, and you shouldn't be using it, don't make a new question.

If the topvoted accepted answer doesn't apply to you, and you really need to use X, then make a new question because that old question didn't address your situation. Make sure to state why this other question wasn't a duplicate. You may also want to consider editing the other questions title if it really is exactly your situation, but not theirs, possibly bring it up on meta.

If the topvoted answer doesn't really apply to anyone, and is wrong, but OP accepted it anyway, then it should probably be discussed on meta, and a new title needs to be discussed for the question, because OP clearly wasn't looking for X, but a way to solve Z. Then you may make a new question similar to the previous situation.

  • If the topvoted answer accepted answer is correct, and you should never have used X, then that's on you, and you shouldn't be using it, don't make a new question.

  • If the topvoted accepted answer doesn't apply to you, and you really need to use X, then make a new question because that old question didn't address your situation. Make sure to state why this other question wasn't a duplicate. You may also want to consider editing the other questions title if it really is exactly your situation, but not theirs, possibly bring it up on meta.

  • If the topvoted answer doesn't really apply to anyone, and is wrong, but OP accepted it anyway, then it should probably be discussed on meta, and a new title needs to be discussed for the question, because OP clearly wasn't looking for X, but a way to solve Z. Then you may make a new question similar to the previous situation.

Unfortunately fixing these two issues requires you not to be a "read only" user, not every curator can look at every question, and you can't really make a tool that automatically detects these kinds of situations, they are sort of subjective. More tooling isn't going to help in these circumstances. It's up to you to bring these issues in a well defined specific manner to the people who can fix them.

I'm not sure the solution to some of these things can't directly be resolved with technology, and may not be in the domain of SO as a company.

Finding results from 9+ years ago... and then having to scroll down through answers to see who updated it based on a decade of changes. Why isn't this problem solved yet?

You can use the "Active" sorting features on answers to see answers with the latest activity. Beyond that this is not something SO really can do much about, but moderators and curators can. Bring up the specific question, maybe we need to restrict new answers, maybe we need to cull other answers, or maybe we need to create a community wiki out of the question or maybe a new question entirely needs to be made for the new version of what ever software you are using. Bring this up on meta, this is something we currently have the tools to deal with.

It's really annoying when a question title matches what I want to do perfectly but the body/answers are different.

This is also not something the SO company can do much about, this is a people problem.

If the topvoted answer accepted answer is correct, and you should never have used X, then that's on you, and you shouldn't be using it, don't make a new question.

If the topvoted accepted answer doesn't apply to you, and you really need to use X, then make a new question because that old question didn't address your situation. Make sure to state why this other question wasn't a duplicate. You may also want to consider editing the other questions title if it really is exactly your situation, but not theirs, possibly bring it up on meta.

If the topvoted answer doesn't really apply to anyone, and is wrong, but OP accepted it anyway, then it should probably be discussed on meta, and a new title needs to be discussed for the question, because OP clearly wasn't looking for X, but a way to solve Z. Then you may make a new question similar to the previous situation.

Unfortunately fixing these two issues requires you not to be a "read only" user, not every curator can look at every question, and you can't really make a tool that automatically detects these kinds of situations, they are sort of subjective. More tooling isn't going to help in these circumstances. It's up to you to bring these issues in a well defined specific manner to the people who can fix them.

I'm not sure the solution to some of these things can't directly be resolved with technology, and may not be in the domain of SO as a company.

Finding results from 9+ years ago... and then having to scroll down through answers to see who updated it based on a decade of changes. Why isn't this problem solved yet?

You can use the "Active" sorting features on answers to see answers with the latest activity. Beyond that this is not something SO really can do much about, but moderators and curators can. Bring up the specific question, maybe we need to restrict new answers, maybe we need to cull other answers, or maybe we need to create a community wiki out of the question or maybe a new question entirely needs to be made for the new version of what ever software you are using. Bring this up on meta, this is something we currently have the tools to deal with.

It's really annoying when a question title matches what I want to do perfectly but the body/answers are different.

This is also not something the SO company can do much about, this is a people problem.

  • If the topvoted answer accepted answer is correct, and you should never have used X, then that's on you, and you shouldn't be using it, don't make a new question.

  • If the topvoted accepted answer doesn't apply to you, and you really need to use X, then make a new question because that old question didn't address your situation. Make sure to state why this other question wasn't a duplicate. You may also want to consider editing the other questions title if it really is exactly your situation, but not theirs, possibly bring it up on meta.

  • If the topvoted answer doesn't really apply to anyone, and is wrong, but OP accepted it anyway, then it should probably be discussed on meta, and a new title needs to be discussed for the question, because OP clearly wasn't looking for X, but a way to solve Z. Then you may make a new question similar to the previous situation.

Unfortunately fixing these two issues requires you not to be a "read only" user, not every curator can look at every question, and you can't really make a tool that automatically detects these kinds of situations, they are sort of subjective. More tooling isn't going to help in these circumstances. It's up to you to bring these issues in a well defined specific manner to the people who can fix them.

Trying to remove the ocean taste.
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Krupip
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While its certainly been trendy on meta to bash stack overflow as a company for ignoring curators and focusing on seemingly counterproductive efforts (and they certainly deserve a lot of the angst they get for a lot of these failures)I'm not sure the solution to some of these things can't directly be resolved with technology, or aren'tand may not be in the domain of SO as a company.

Finding results from 9+ years ago... and then having to scroll down through answers to see who updated it based on a decade of changes. Why isn't this problem solved yet?

You can use the "Active" sorting features on answers to see answers with the latest activity. Beyond that this is not something SO really can do much about, but moderators and curators can. Bring up the specific question, maybe we need to restrict new answers, maybe we need to cull other answers, or maybe we need to create a community wiki out of the question or maybe a new question entirely needs to be made for the new version of what ever software you are using. Bring this up on meta, this is something we currently have the tools to deal with.

It's really annoying when a question title matches what I want to do perfectly but the body/answers are different.

This is also not something the SO company can do much about, this is a people problem.

If the topvoted answer accepted answer is correct, and you should never have used X, then that's on you, and you shouldn't be using it, don't make a new question.

If the topvoted accepted answer doesn't apply to you, and you really need to use X, then make a new question because that old question didn't address your situation. Make sure to state why this other question wasn't a duplicate. You may also want to consider editing the other questions title if it really is exactly your situation, but not theirs, possibly bring it up on meta.

If the topvoted answer doesn't really apply to anyone, and is wrong, but OP accepted it anyway, then it should probably be discussed on meta, and a new title needs to be discussed for the question, because OP clearly wasn't looking for X, but a way to solve Z. Then you may make a new question similar to the previous situation.

Unfortunately fixing these two issues requires you not to be a "read only" user, not every curator can look at every question, and you can't really make a tool that automatically detects these kinds of situations, they are sort of subjective. More tooling isn't going to help in these circumstances. It's up to you to bring these issues in a well defined specific manner to the people who can fix them.

While its certainly been trendy on meta to bash stack overflow as a company for ignoring curators and focusing on seemingly counterproductive efforts (and they certainly deserve a lot of the angst they get for a lot of these failures) the solution to some of these things can't directly be resolved with technology, or aren't not in the domain of SO as a company.

Finding results from 9+ years ago... and then having to scroll down through answers to see who updated it based on a decade of changes. Why isn't this problem solved yet?

You can use the "Active" sorting features on answers to see answers with the latest activity. Beyond that this is not something SO really can do much about, but moderators and curators can. Bring up the specific question, maybe we need to restrict new answers, maybe we need to cull other answers, or maybe we need to create a community wiki out of the question or maybe a new question entirely needs to be made for the new version of what ever software you are using. Bring this up on meta, this is something we currently have the tools to deal with.

It's really annoying when a question title matches what I want to do perfectly but the body/answers are different.

This is also not something the SO company can do much about, this is a people problem.

If the topvoted answer accepted answer is correct, and you should never have used X, then that's on you, and you shouldn't be using it, don't make a new question.

If the topvoted accepted answer doesn't apply to you, and you really need to use X, then make a new question because that old question didn't address your situation. Make sure to state why this other question wasn't a duplicate. You may also want to consider editing the other questions title if it really is exactly your situation, but not theirs, possibly bring it up on meta.

If the topvoted answer doesn't really apply to anyone, and is wrong, but OP accepted it anyway, then it should probably be discussed on meta, and a new title needs to be discussed for the question, because OP clearly wasn't looking for X, but a way to solve Z. Then you may make a new question similar to the previous situation.

Unfortunately fixing these two issues requires you not to be a "read only" user, not every curator can look at every question, and you can't really make a tool that automatically detects these kinds of situations, they are sort of subjective. More tooling isn't going to help in these circumstances. It's up to you to bring these issues in a well defined specific manner to the people who can fix them.

I'm not sure the solution to some of these things can't directly be resolved with technology, and may not be in the domain of SO as a company.

Finding results from 9+ years ago... and then having to scroll down through answers to see who updated it based on a decade of changes. Why isn't this problem solved yet?

You can use the "Active" sorting features on answers to see answers with the latest activity. Beyond that this is not something SO really can do much about, but moderators and curators can. Bring up the specific question, maybe we need to restrict new answers, maybe we need to cull other answers, or maybe we need to create a community wiki out of the question or maybe a new question entirely needs to be made for the new version of what ever software you are using. Bring this up on meta, this is something we currently have the tools to deal with.

It's really annoying when a question title matches what I want to do perfectly but the body/answers are different.

This is also not something the SO company can do much about, this is a people problem.

If the topvoted answer accepted answer is correct, and you should never have used X, then that's on you, and you shouldn't be using it, don't make a new question.

If the topvoted accepted answer doesn't apply to you, and you really need to use X, then make a new question because that old question didn't address your situation. Make sure to state why this other question wasn't a duplicate. You may also want to consider editing the other questions title if it really is exactly your situation, but not theirs, possibly bring it up on meta.

If the topvoted answer doesn't really apply to anyone, and is wrong, but OP accepted it anyway, then it should probably be discussed on meta, and a new title needs to be discussed for the question, because OP clearly wasn't looking for X, but a way to solve Z. Then you may make a new question similar to the previous situation.

Unfortunately fixing these two issues requires you not to be a "read only" user, not every curator can look at every question, and you can't really make a tool that automatically detects these kinds of situations, they are sort of subjective. More tooling isn't going to help in these circumstances. It's up to you to bring these issues in a well defined specific manner to the people who can fix them.

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Krupip
  • 4.8k
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While its certainly been trendy on meta to bash stack overflow as a company for ignoring curators and focusing on seemingly counterproductive efforts (and they certainly deserve a lot of the angst they get for a lot of these failures) the solution to some of these things can't directly be resolved with technology, or aren't not in the domain of SO as a company.

Finding results from 9+ years ago... and then having to scroll down through answers to see who updated it based on a decade of changes. Why isn't this problem solved yet?

ThisYou can use the "Active" sorting features on answers to see answers with the latest activity. Beyond that this is not something SO really can do much about, but moderators and curators can. Bring up the specific question, maybe we need to restrict new answers, maybe we need to cull other answers, or maybe we need to create a community wiki out of the question or maybe a new question entirely needs to be made for the new version of what ever software you are using. Bring this up on meta, this is something we currently have the tools to deal with.

It's really annoying when a question title matches what I want to do perfectly but the body/answers are different.

This is also not something the SO company can do much about, this is a people problem.

If the topvoted answer accepted answer is correct, and you should never have used X, then that's on you, and you shouldn't be using it, don't make a new question.

If the topvoted accepted answer doesn't apply to you, and you really need to use X, then make a new question because that old question didn't address your situation. Make sure to state why this other question wasn't a duplicate. You may also want to consider editing the other questions title if it really is exactly your situation, but not theirs, possibly bring it up on meta.

If the topvoted answer doesn't really apply to anyone, and is wrong, but OP accepted it anyway, then it should probably be discussed on meta, and a new title needs to be discussed for the question, because OP clearly wasn't looking for X, but a way to solve Z. Then you may make a new question similar to the previous situation.

Unfortunately fixing these two issues requires you not to be a "read only" user, not every curator can look at every question, and you can't really make a tool that automatically detects these kinds of situations, they are sort of subjective. More tooling isn't going to help in these circumstances. It's up to you to bring these issues in a well defined specific manner to the people who can fix them.

While its certainly been trendy on meta to bash stack overflow as a company for ignoring curators and focusing on seemingly counterproductive efforts (and they certainly deserve a lot of the angst they get for a lot of these failures) the solution to some of these things can't directly be resolved with technology, or aren't not in the domain of SO as a company.

Finding results from 9+ years ago... and then having to scroll down through answers to see who updated it based on a decade of changes. Why isn't this problem solved yet?

This is not something SO really can do much about, but moderators and curators can. Bring up the specific question, maybe we need to restrict new answers, maybe we need to cull other answers, or maybe we need to create a community wiki out of the question or maybe a new question entirely needs to be made for the new version of what ever software you are using. Bring this up on meta, this is something we currently have the tools to deal with.

It's really annoying when a question title matches what I want to do perfectly but the body/answers are different.

This is also not something the SO company can do much about, this is a people problem.

If the topvoted answer accepted answer is correct, and you should never have used X, then that's on you, and you shouldn't be using it, don't make a new question.

If the topvoted accepted answer doesn't apply to you, and you really need to use X, then make a new question because that old question didn't address your situation. Make sure to state why this other question wasn't a duplicate. You may also want to consider editing the other questions title if it really is exactly your situation, but not theirs, possibly bring it up on meta.

If the topvoted answer doesn't really apply to anyone, and is wrong, but OP accepted it anyway, then it should probably be discussed on meta, and a new title needs to be discussed for the question, because OP clearly wasn't looking for X, but a way to solve Z. Then you may make a new question similar to the previous situation.

Unfortunately fixing these two issues requires you not to be a "read only" user, not every curator can look at every question, and you can't really make a tool that automatically detects these kinds of situations, they are sort of subjective. More tooling isn't going to help in these circumstances. It's up to you to bring these issues in a well defined specific manner to the people who can fix them.

While its certainly been trendy on meta to bash stack overflow as a company for ignoring curators and focusing on seemingly counterproductive efforts (and they certainly deserve a lot of the angst they get for a lot of these failures) the solution to some of these things can't directly be resolved with technology, or aren't not in the domain of SO as a company.

Finding results from 9+ years ago... and then having to scroll down through answers to see who updated it based on a decade of changes. Why isn't this problem solved yet?

You can use the "Active" sorting features on answers to see answers with the latest activity. Beyond that this is not something SO really can do much about, but moderators and curators can. Bring up the specific question, maybe we need to restrict new answers, maybe we need to cull other answers, or maybe we need to create a community wiki out of the question or maybe a new question entirely needs to be made for the new version of what ever software you are using. Bring this up on meta, this is something we currently have the tools to deal with.

It's really annoying when a question title matches what I want to do perfectly but the body/answers are different.

This is also not something the SO company can do much about, this is a people problem.

If the topvoted answer accepted answer is correct, and you should never have used X, then that's on you, and you shouldn't be using it, don't make a new question.

If the topvoted accepted answer doesn't apply to you, and you really need to use X, then make a new question because that old question didn't address your situation. Make sure to state why this other question wasn't a duplicate. You may also want to consider editing the other questions title if it really is exactly your situation, but not theirs, possibly bring it up on meta.

If the topvoted answer doesn't really apply to anyone, and is wrong, but OP accepted it anyway, then it should probably be discussed on meta, and a new title needs to be discussed for the question, because OP clearly wasn't looking for X, but a way to solve Z. Then you may make a new question similar to the previous situation.

Unfortunately fixing these two issues requires you not to be a "read only" user, not every curator can look at every question, and you can't really make a tool that automatically detects these kinds of situations, they are sort of subjective. More tooling isn't going to help in these circumstances. It's up to you to bring these issues in a well defined specific manner to the people who can fix them.

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Krupip
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