It's time to address the elephant in the room. Let's go through the list of responses on the question collection Q&A and see if they have been addressed. But before doing so: please change the process of evaluating the suggestions to align with the established process of how other projects are discussed with the community (after all, we are your backbone).
Processed concerns should get one of the status-completed, status-declined, status-deferred, or status-planned. It is a huge waste of contributor time to have them go through the responses manually, and seeing that a lot of them to be simply ignored (or, interpreting this with a highest benefit of the doubt possible, forgotten about).
Without further ado, let's dive into this year's responses (cutting off at score 3 as there are way too many items to process):
Response | Score | Status |
---|---|---|
VCS | 50 | status-completed |
Fastify | 34 | status-completed |
Flow | 31 | status-completed |
Deno | 31 | status-completed |
.NET | 28 | status-completed |
OCaml | 27 | status-completed |
NPM | 19 | status-completed |
RabbitMQ | 15 | nope |
Runtimes | 14 | nope |
WASM | 11 | nope |
Elm | 11 | nope |
Neo4j | 9 | status-completed |
Nginx | 8 | nope |
HAProxy | 8 | nope (SE's own tech stack) |
Firebase RDB | 8 | status-completed |
Unit testing | 7 | nope |
Ember.js | 5 | nope |
RevenDBRavenDB | 5 | nope |
Fortran | 5 | status-completed |
BASIC | 5 | nope |
VB.NET | 3 | nope |
As can be seen, the score seems to be not the only contributing factor in choosing what to add and omit, so what's the criteria? If you expect engagement from us, we expect engagement back, at least in terms of responding to what will and will not be included in the survey.
Granted, there is an "other" field, but it only exacerbates the problem unsurprizingly brought up in the top-scored answer, as well as makes the choice of technologies that did make it to the list rather arbitrary.