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Sabito
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I think that the trending indicator is going to solve for a lot of cases where 2009 rears up and smacks you in the face with a fossil. In almost all cases that (very anecdotally) come to mind when it relates to security issues, there's almost always a new and better answer that folks in the [language] chat room have been trying to promote through voting on it.

If we can just catch that bit of signal and amplify it as needed, by letting folks drill right into trending answers as they emerge, then the technical part of the problem has a solid workaround.

What remains is what to do with the fossil, and I still think allowing folks with a silver or better tag badge the option to vote to deprecate it (turn the checkmark gray, treat it as a non-accepted answer and add an admonition that it was once a prized artifact and has been archived for posterity) and mark the question unanswered again is probably the way to go.

I like the idea of labels, and that makes a ton of sense for Python, but there's still an awful lot of language-agnostic barnacles clinging to the steam ship that isSS Stack Overflow :)

I think that the trending indicator is going to solve for a lot of cases where 2009 rears up and smacks you in the face with a fossil. In almost all cases that (very anecdotally) come to mind when it relates to security issues, there's almost always a new and better answer that folks in the [language] chat room have been trying to promote through voting on it.

If we can just catch that bit of signal and amplify it as needed, by letting folks drill right into trending answers as they emerge, then the technical part of the problem has a solid workaround.

What remains is what to do with the fossil, and I still think allowing folks with a silver or better tag badge the option to vote to deprecate it (turn the checkmark gray, treat it as a non-accepted answer and add an admonition that it was once a prized artifact and has been archived for posterity) and mark the question unanswered again is probably the way to go.

I like the idea of labels, and that makes a ton of sense for Python, but there's still an awful lot of language-agnostic barnacles clinging to the steam ship that is Stack Overflow :)

I think that the trending indicator is going to solve for a lot of cases where 2009 rears up and smacks you in the face with a fossil. In almost all cases that (very anecdotally) come to mind when it relates to security issues, there's almost always a new and better answer that folks in the [language] chat room have been trying to promote through voting on it.

If we can just catch that bit of signal and amplify it as needed, by letting folks drill right into trending answers as they emerge, then the technical part of the problem has a solid workaround.

What remains is what to do with the fossil, and I still think allowing folks with a silver or better tag badge the option to vote to deprecate it (turn the checkmark gray, treat it as a non-accepted answer and add an admonition that it was once a prized artifact and has been archived for posterity) and mark the question unanswered again is probably the way to go.

I like the idea of labels, and that makes a ton of sense for Python, but there's still an awful lot of language-agnostic barnacles clinging to the SS Stack Overflow :)

added 16 characters in body
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Sabito
  • 5k
  • 1
  • 17
  • 40

I think that the trending indicator is going to solve for a lot of cases where 2009 rears up and smacks you in the face with a fossil. In almost all cases that (very anecdotally) come to mind when it relates to security issues, there's almost always a new and better answer that folks in the [language] chat room have been trying to promote through voting on it.

If we can just catch that bit of signal and amplify it as needed, by letting folks drill right into trending answers as they emerge, then the technical part of the problem has a solid work-aroundworkaround.

What remains is what to do with the fossil, and I still think allowing folks with a silver or better tag badge the option to vote to deprecate it (turn the checkmark gray, treat it as a non-accepted answer and add aan admonition that it was once a prized artifact and has been archived for posterity) and mark the question unanswered again is probably the way to go.

I like the idea of labels, and that makes a ton of sense for Python, but there's still an awful lot of language-agnostic barnacles clinging to the SSsteam ship that is Stack Overflow :)

I think that the trending indicator is going to solve for a lot of cases where 2009 rears up and smacks you in the face with a fossil. In almost all cases that (very anecdotally) come to mind when it relates to security issues, there's almost always a new and better answer that folks in the [language] chat room have been trying to promote through voting on it.

If we can just catch that bit of signal and amplify it as needed, by letting folks drill right into trending answers as they emerge, then the technical part of the problem has a solid work-around.

What remains is what to do with the fossil, and I still think allowing folks with a silver or better tag badge the option to vote to deprecate it (turn the checkmark gray, treat it as a non-accepted answer and add a admonition that it was once a prized artifact and has been archived for posterity) and mark the question unanswered again is probably the way to go.

I like the idea of labels, and that makes a ton of sense for Python, but there's still an awful lot of language-agnostic barnacles clinging to the SS Stack Overflow :)

I think that the trending indicator is going to solve for a lot of cases where 2009 rears up and smacks you in the face with a fossil. In almost all cases that (very anecdotally) come to mind when it relates to security issues, there's almost always a new and better answer that folks in the [language] chat room have been trying to promote through voting on it.

If we can just catch that bit of signal and amplify it as needed, by letting folks drill right into trending answers as they emerge, then the technical part of the problem has a solid workaround.

What remains is what to do with the fossil, and I still think allowing folks with a silver or better tag badge the option to vote to deprecate it (turn the checkmark gray, treat it as a non-accepted answer and add an admonition that it was once a prized artifact and has been archived for posterity) and mark the question unanswered again is probably the way to go.

I like the idea of labels, and that makes a ton of sense for Python, but there's still an awful lot of language-agnostic barnacles clinging to the steam ship that is Stack Overflow :)

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user50049
user50049

I think that the trending indicator is going to solve for a lot of cases where 2009 rears up and smacks you in the face with a fossil. In almost all cases that (very anecdotally) come to mind when it relates to security issues, there's almost always a new and better answer that folks in the [language] chat room have been trying to promote through voting on it.

If we can just catch that bit of signal and amplify it as needed, by letting folks drill right into trending answers as they emerge, then the technical part of the problem has a solid work-around.

What remains is what to do with the fossil, and I still think allowing folks with a silver or better tag badge the option to vote to deprecate it (turn the checkmark gray, treat it as a non-accepted answer and add a admonition that it was once a prized artifact and has been archived for posterity) and mark the question unanswered again is probably the way to go.

I like the idea of labels, and that makes a ton of sense for Python, but there's still an awful lot of language-agnostic barnacles clinging to the SS Stack Overflow :)