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Cindy Meister
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Trying to consider it objectively, at this point I'd mainly say inertia and the force of habit. If I were to discover a good alternative, I'd be gone. I've lost my emotional ties with the site concept over the course of the past year. I remain active only peripherally and don't consciously invest as much time in curation as it appears the "Powers" aren't really interested in having the site curated for quality, anymore...

I've been supporting people on-line and moderating since the mid-90's, starting with CompuServe, then the newsgroups Microsoft migrated to. When Office development moved to the MSDN forums (and the dev teams were active there) that's where I went. A few years ago I found out the dev teams (Office JS) were moving to "the place where professional developers want to be" - Stack Overflow.

That's how I ended up here. After discovering the Q&A and moderation philosophy I became "hooked". I also liked the much higher standards for questions (especially after slogging through what was showing up on MSDN, where there is no "quality filter") which meant I could really concentrate on finding answers to unusual topics.

Sadly, SO is now not much better than MSDN was when I moved over... Not only the quality of the questions, but also unannounced reduction of meaningful interaction with the site owners. (We used to have useful dialogs with MS, back in the day... )

Edit: Gimby's answer points out that the question actually asks about why one stays on Meta... I actually find the answers in reference to the main site interesting, enlightening and even encouraging. But the reason I come to meta is to remain informed. I wouldn't phrase it as "stay on Meta", however!

Trying to consider it objectively, at this point I'd mainly say inertia and the force of habit. If I were to discover a good alternative, I'd be gone. I've lost my emotional ties with the site concept over the course of the past year. I remain active only peripherally and don't consciously invest as much time in curation as it appears the "Powers" aren't really interested in having the site curated for quality, anymore...

I've been supporting people on-line and moderating since the mid-90's, starting with CompuServe, then the newsgroups Microsoft migrated to. When Office development moved to the MSDN forums (and the dev teams were active there) that's where I went. A few years ago I found out the dev teams (Office JS) were moving to "the place where professional developers want to be" - Stack Overflow.

That's how I ended up here. After discovering the Q&A and moderation philosophy I became "hooked". I also liked the much higher standards for questions (especially after slogging through what was showing up on MSDN, where there is no "quality filter") which meant I could really concentrate on finding answers to unusual topics.

Sadly, SO is now not much better than MSDN was when I moved over... Not only the quality of the questions, but also unannounced reduction of meaningful interaction with the site owners. (We used to have useful dialogs with MS, back in the day... )

Trying to consider it objectively, at this point I'd mainly say inertia and the force of habit. If I were to discover a good alternative, I'd be gone. I've lost my emotional ties with the site concept over the course of the past year. I remain active only peripherally and don't consciously invest as much time in curation as it appears the "Powers" aren't really interested in having the site curated for quality, anymore...

I've been supporting people on-line and moderating since the mid-90's, starting with CompuServe, then the newsgroups Microsoft migrated to. When Office development moved to the MSDN forums (and the dev teams were active there) that's where I went. A few years ago I found out the dev teams (Office JS) were moving to "the place where professional developers want to be" - Stack Overflow.

That's how I ended up here. After discovering the Q&A and moderation philosophy I became "hooked". I also liked the much higher standards for questions (especially after slogging through what was showing up on MSDN, where there is no "quality filter") which meant I could really concentrate on finding answers to unusual topics.

Sadly, SO is now not much better than MSDN was when I moved over... Not only the quality of the questions, but also unannounced reduction of meaningful interaction with the site owners. (We used to have useful dialogs with MS, back in the day... )

Edit: Gimby's answer points out that the question actually asks about why one stays on Meta... I actually find the answers in reference to the main site interesting, enlightening and even encouraging. But the reason I come to meta is to remain informed. I wouldn't phrase it as "stay on Meta", however!

Source Link
Cindy Meister
  • 25.6k
  • 4
  • 24
  • 37

Trying to consider it objectively, at this point I'd mainly say inertia and the force of habit. If I were to discover a good alternative, I'd be gone. I've lost my emotional ties with the site concept over the course of the past year. I remain active only peripherally and don't consciously invest as much time in curation as it appears the "Powers" aren't really interested in having the site curated for quality, anymore...

I've been supporting people on-line and moderating since the mid-90's, starting with CompuServe, then the newsgroups Microsoft migrated to. When Office development moved to the MSDN forums (and the dev teams were active there) that's where I went. A few years ago I found out the dev teams (Office JS) were moving to "the place where professional developers want to be" - Stack Overflow.

That's how I ended up here. After discovering the Q&A and moderation philosophy I became "hooked". I also liked the much higher standards for questions (especially after slogging through what was showing up on MSDN, where there is no "quality filter") which meant I could really concentrate on finding answers to unusual topics.

Sadly, SO is now not much better than MSDN was when I moved over... Not only the quality of the questions, but also unannounced reduction of meaningful interaction with the site owners. (We used to have useful dialogs with MS, back in the day... )