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Dale K
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I asked my first question in January 2012. It wasn't good. I got four downovtesdownvotes (+0/-4), and it was rapidly closed because I did not "demonstrate a minimal understanding of the problem" (not inaccurate). One user was so incensed by my question, and my question alone, that they proceeded to serially downvote me, which I flagged, but the votes were never to my memory reverted. I got one answer. The answerer, to credit, did help me understand where the error in my thought process was.

On my third attempt at asking a question, I finally received my first upvote. After that, I dedicated most of my time to answering questions, and sitting around Meta Stack Overflow. I amassed a fair bit of reputation that way, but it was slow work.

It's a miracle I'm still here. That account no longer exists. If I were anyone but me, with my weird fascination with people and systems, I'd be long gone. But I stuck around because I didn't understand. I kept trying because I don't mind looking like a fool in public - never really have. To me, embarrassment and shame are temporary. The lessons they teach are imperative. Who will remember some learner stumbling in public over reading data from DirectX?

Important context: I was also very, very young.


Three things characterized my experience starting out on Stack Overflow in 2012.

  1. I felt exposed - and not in a good way. This isn't necessarily something Stack Overflow can control, but I (and I think a lot of people now) believed that asking for help is a sign of vulnerability. What to me was an expression of vulnerability was met with some fairly harsh reaction.
  2. I got my answer ("you don't know what you're doing"), but the way it was communicated was frustrating. Analogous to #1, the way people and systems communicated this message to me was mysterious. The way it was presented (here is the list of people who think you don't get it) was certainly a hit to my ego.
  3. It took a long time to reach the point where I could contribute productively, consistently. And the only way I got there was by participating actively on MSO for an extended period of time.

'course, things aren't done the same way around here, anymore. 2012 was a long time ago. This experience needs to be read in a historical light. Certainly some of this still happens today - I am sure the timbre of this is familiar to many here. Even though it'd be hard for me to say I'd have an analogous experience today, I hope a bit of history proves useful.

I asked my first question in January 2012. It wasn't good. I got four downovtes (+0/-4), and it was rapidly closed because I did not "demonstrate a minimal understanding of the problem" (not inaccurate). One user was so incensed by my question, and my question alone, that they proceeded to serially downvote me, which I flagged, but the votes were never to my memory reverted. I got one answer. The answerer, to credit, did help me understand where the error in my thought process was.

On my third attempt at asking a question, I finally received my first upvote. After that, I dedicated most of my time to answering questions, and sitting around Meta Stack Overflow. I amassed a fair bit of reputation that way, but it was slow work.

It's a miracle I'm still here. That account no longer exists. If I were anyone but me, with my weird fascination with people and systems, I'd be long gone. But I stuck around because I didn't understand. I kept trying because I don't mind looking like a fool in public - never really have. To me, embarrassment and shame are temporary. The lessons they teach are imperative. Who will remember some learner stumbling in public over reading data from DirectX?

Important context: I was also very, very young.


Three things characterized my experience starting out on Stack Overflow in 2012.

  1. I felt exposed - and not in a good way. This isn't necessarily something Stack Overflow can control, but I (and I think a lot of people now) believed that asking for help is a sign of vulnerability. What to me was an expression of vulnerability was met with some fairly harsh reaction.
  2. I got my answer ("you don't know what you're doing"), but the way it was communicated was frustrating. Analogous to #1, the way people and systems communicated this message to me was mysterious. The way it was presented (here is the list of people who think you don't get it) was certainly a hit to my ego.
  3. It took a long time to reach the point where I could contribute productively, consistently. And the only way I got there was by participating actively on MSO for an extended period of time.

'course, things aren't done the same way around here, anymore. 2012 was a long time ago. This experience needs to be read in a historical light. Certainly some of this still happens today - I am sure the timbre of this is familiar to many here. Even though it'd be hard for me to say I'd have an analogous experience today, I hope a bit of history proves useful.

I asked my first question in January 2012. It wasn't good. I got four downvotes (+0/-4), and it was rapidly closed because I did not "demonstrate a minimal understanding of the problem" (not inaccurate). One user was so incensed by my question, and my question alone, that they proceeded to serially downvote me, which I flagged, but the votes were never to my memory reverted. I got one answer. The answerer, to credit, did help me understand where the error in my thought process was.

On my third attempt at asking a question, I finally received my first upvote. After that, I dedicated most of my time to answering questions, and sitting around Meta Stack Overflow. I amassed a fair bit of reputation that way, but it was slow work.

It's a miracle I'm still here. That account no longer exists. If I were anyone but me, with my weird fascination with people and systems, I'd be long gone. But I stuck around because I didn't understand. I kept trying because I don't mind looking like a fool in public - never really have. To me, embarrassment and shame are temporary. The lessons they teach are imperative. Who will remember some learner stumbling in public over reading data from DirectX?

Important context: I was also very, very young.


Three things characterized my experience starting out on Stack Overflow in 2012.

  1. I felt exposed - and not in a good way. This isn't necessarily something Stack Overflow can control, but I (and I think a lot of people now) believed that asking for help is a sign of vulnerability. What to me was an expression of vulnerability was met with some fairly harsh reaction.
  2. I got my answer ("you don't know what you're doing"), but the way it was communicated was frustrating. Analogous to #1, the way people and systems communicated this message to me was mysterious. The way it was presented (here is the list of people who think you don't get it) was certainly a hit to my ego.
  3. It took a long time to reach the point where I could contribute productively, consistently. And the only way I got there was by participating actively on MSO for an extended period of time.

'course, things aren't done the same way around here, anymore. 2012 was a long time ago. This experience needs to be read in a historical light. Certainly some of this still happens today - I am sure the timbre of this is familiar to many here. Even though it'd be hard for me to say I'd have an analogous experience today, I hope a bit of history proves useful.

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Slate StaffMod
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I asked my first question in January 2012. It wasn't good. I got four downovtes (+0/-4), and it was rapidly closed because I did not "demonstrate a minimal understanding of the problem" (not inaccurate). One user was so incensed by my question, and my question alone, that they proceeded to serially downvote me, which I flagged, but the votes were never to my memory reverted. I got one answer. The answerer, to credit, did help me understand where the error in my thought process was.

On my third attempt at asking a question, I finally received my first upvote. After that, I dedicated most of my time to answering questions, and sitting around Meta Stack Overflow. I amassed a fair bit of reputation that way, but it was slow work.

It's a miracle I'm still here. That account no longer exists. If I were anyone but me, with my weird fascination with people and systems, I'd be long gone. But I stuck around because I didn't understand. I kept trying because I don't mind looking like a fool in public - never really have. To me, embarrassment and shame are temporary. The lessons they teach are imperative. Who will remember some learner stumbling in public over reading data from DirectX?

Important context: I was also very, very young.


Three things characterized my experience starting out on Stack Overflow in 2012.

  1. I felt exposed - and not in a good way. This isn't necessarily something Stack Overflow can control, but I (and I think a lot of people now) believed that asking for help is a sign of vulnerability. What to me was an expression of vulnerability was met with some fairly harsh reaction.
  2. I got my answer ("you don't know what you're doing"), but the way it was communicated was frustrating. Analogous to #1, the way people and systems communicated this message to me was mysterious. The way it was presented (here is the list of people who think you don't get it) was certainly a hit to my ego.
  3. It took a long time to reach the point where I could contribute productively, consistently. And the only way I got there was by participating actively on MSO for an extended period of time.

'course, things aren't done the same way around here, anymore. 2012 was a long time ago. This experience needs to be read in a historical light. Certainly some of this still happens today - I am sure the timbre of this is familiar to many here. Even though it'd be hard for me to say I'd have an analogous experience today, I hope a bit of history proves useful.

I asked my first question in January 2012. It wasn't good. I got four downovtes (+0/-4), and it was rapidly closed because I did not "demonstrate a minimal understanding of the problem" (not inaccurate). One user was so incensed by my question, and my question alone, that they proceeded to serially downvote me, which I flagged, but the votes were never to my memory reverted. I got one answer. The answerer, to credit, did help me understand where the error in my thought process was.

On my third attempt at asking a question, I finally received my first upvote. After that, I dedicated most of my time to answering questions, and sitting around Meta Stack Overflow. I amassed a fair bit of reputation that way, but it was slow work.

It's a miracle I'm still here. That account no longer exists. If I were anyone but me, with my weird fascination with people and systems, I'd be long gone. But I stuck around because I didn't understand. I kept trying because I don't mind looking like a fool in public - never really have. To me, embarrassment and shame are temporary. The lessons they teach are imperative. Who will remember some learner stumbling in public over reading data from DirectX?

Important context: I was also very, very young.


Three things characterized my experience starting out on Stack Overflow in 2012.

  1. I felt exposed - and not in a good way. This isn't necessarily something Stack Overflow can control, but I (and I think a lot of people now) believed that asking for help is a sign of vulnerability. What to me was an expression of vulnerability was met with some fairly harsh reaction.
  2. I got my answer ("you don't know what you're doing"), but the way it was communicated was frustrating. Analogous to #1, the way people and systems communicated this message to me was
  3. It took a long time to reach the point where I could contribute productively, consistently. And the only way I got there was by participating actively on MSO for an extended period of time.

'course, things aren't done the same way around here, anymore. 2012 was a long time ago. This experience needs to be read in a historical light. Certainly some of this still happens today - I am sure the timbre of this is familiar to many here. Even though it'd be hard for me to say I'd have an analogous experience today, I hope a bit of history proves useful.

I asked my first question in January 2012. It wasn't good. I got four downovtes (+0/-4), and it was rapidly closed because I did not "demonstrate a minimal understanding of the problem" (not inaccurate). One user was so incensed by my question, and my question alone, that they proceeded to serially downvote me, which I flagged, but the votes were never to my memory reverted. I got one answer. The answerer, to credit, did help me understand where the error in my thought process was.

On my third attempt at asking a question, I finally received my first upvote. After that, I dedicated most of my time to answering questions, and sitting around Meta Stack Overflow. I amassed a fair bit of reputation that way, but it was slow work.

It's a miracle I'm still here. That account no longer exists. If I were anyone but me, with my weird fascination with people and systems, I'd be long gone. But I stuck around because I didn't understand. I kept trying because I don't mind looking like a fool in public - never really have. To me, embarrassment and shame are temporary. The lessons they teach are imperative. Who will remember some learner stumbling in public over reading data from DirectX?

Important context: I was also very, very young.


Three things characterized my experience starting out on Stack Overflow in 2012.

  1. I felt exposed - and not in a good way. This isn't necessarily something Stack Overflow can control, but I (and I think a lot of people now) believed that asking for help is a sign of vulnerability. What to me was an expression of vulnerability was met with some fairly harsh reaction.
  2. I got my answer ("you don't know what you're doing"), but the way it was communicated was frustrating. Analogous to #1, the way people and systems communicated this message to me was mysterious. The way it was presented (here is the list of people who think you don't get it) was certainly a hit to my ego.
  3. It took a long time to reach the point where I could contribute productively, consistently. And the only way I got there was by participating actively on MSO for an extended period of time.

'course, things aren't done the same way around here, anymore. 2012 was a long time ago. This experience needs to be read in a historical light. Certainly some of this still happens today - I am sure the timbre of this is familiar to many here. Even though it'd be hard for me to say I'd have an analogous experience today, I hope a bit of history proves useful.

Source Link
Slate StaffMod
  • 301
  • 1
  • 22
  • 31

I asked my first question in January 2012. It wasn't good. I got four downovtes (+0/-4), and it was rapidly closed because I did not "demonstrate a minimal understanding of the problem" (not inaccurate). One user was so incensed by my question, and my question alone, that they proceeded to serially downvote me, which I flagged, but the votes were never to my memory reverted. I got one answer. The answerer, to credit, did help me understand where the error in my thought process was.

On my third attempt at asking a question, I finally received my first upvote. After that, I dedicated most of my time to answering questions, and sitting around Meta Stack Overflow. I amassed a fair bit of reputation that way, but it was slow work.

It's a miracle I'm still here. That account no longer exists. If I were anyone but me, with my weird fascination with people and systems, I'd be long gone. But I stuck around because I didn't understand. I kept trying because I don't mind looking like a fool in public - never really have. To me, embarrassment and shame are temporary. The lessons they teach are imperative. Who will remember some learner stumbling in public over reading data from DirectX?

Important context: I was also very, very young.


Three things characterized my experience starting out on Stack Overflow in 2012.

  1. I felt exposed - and not in a good way. This isn't necessarily something Stack Overflow can control, but I (and I think a lot of people now) believed that asking for help is a sign of vulnerability. What to me was an expression of vulnerability was met with some fairly harsh reaction.
  2. I got my answer ("you don't know what you're doing"), but the way it was communicated was frustrating. Analogous to #1, the way people and systems communicated this message to me was
  3. It took a long time to reach the point where I could contribute productively, consistently. And the only way I got there was by participating actively on MSO for an extended period of time.

'course, things aren't done the same way around here, anymore. 2012 was a long time ago. This experience needs to be read in a historical light. Certainly some of this still happens today - I am sure the timbre of this is familiar to many here. Even though it'd be hard for me to say I'd have an analogous experience today, I hope a bit of history proves useful.