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Add punctuation that makes the seconds sense easier to parse
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zcoop98
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The R collective was opened earlier this year, and I am trying to understand the role of articles within the collective.

Unless one is a Recognized Member of the collective, a person who wants to write an article must: propose it, have the proposal reviewed, write a draft, and respond to feedback before the article would be published.

Within the R community, it's a lot easier to register as a blog with r-bloggers.com and start writing articles that are immediately published to the readers of R-Bloggers.

Why would someone jump through the hoops to write a Stack Overflow Collectives article when lower friction alternatives to distributing one's content exist?

On the contrary, it seems easier to expand a Stack Overflow answer into a blog post that can be published elsewhere, like I did with Estimating the Runtime of an R Script which was based on my answer to How to estimate R script running time?.

The R collective was opened earlier this year, and I am trying to understand the role of articles within the collective.

Unless one is a Recognized Member of the collective a person who wants to write an article must propose it, have the proposal reviewed, write a draft, and respond to feedback before the article would be published.

Within the R community, it's a lot easier to register as a blog with r-bloggers.com and start writing articles that are immediately published to the readers of R-Bloggers.

Why would someone jump through the hoops to write a Stack Overflow Collectives article when lower friction alternatives to distributing one's content exist?

On the contrary, it seems easier to expand a Stack Overflow answer into a blog post that can be published elsewhere, like I did with Estimating the Runtime of an R Script which was based on my answer to How to estimate R script running time?.

The R collective was opened earlier this year, and I am trying to understand the role of articles within the collective.

Unless one is a Recognized Member of the collective, a person who wants to write an article must: propose it, have the proposal reviewed, write a draft, and respond to feedback before the article would be published.

Within the R community, it's a lot easier to register as a blog with r-bloggers.com and start writing articles that are immediately published to the readers of R-Bloggers.

Why would someone jump through the hoops to write a Stack Overflow Collectives article when lower friction alternatives to distributing one's content exist?

On the contrary, it seems easier to expand a Stack Overflow answer into a blog post that can be published elsewhere, like I did with Estimating the Runtime of an R Script which was based on my answer to How to estimate R script running time?.

Active reading [<https://www.r-bloggers.com/about/> <https://stackoverflow.design/brand/copywriting/naming/>].
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Peter Mortensen
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The R collective was opened earlier this year, and I am trying to understand the role of articles within the collective.

Unless one is a Recognized Member of the collective a person who wants to write an article must propose it, have the proposal reviewed, write a draft, and respond to feedback before the article would be published.

Within the R community, it's a lot easier to register as a blog with r-bloggers.comr-bloggers.com and start writing articles that are immediately published to the readers of rR-bloggersBloggers.

Why would someone jump through the hoops to write a StackoverflowStack Overflow Collectives article when lower friction alternatives to distributing one's content exist?

On the contrary, it seems easier to expand a stackoverflowStack Overflow answer into a blog post that can be published elsewhere, like I did with Estimating the Runtime of an R Script which was based on my answer to How to estimate R script running time?.

The R collective was opened earlier this year, and I am trying to understand the role of articles within the collective.

Unless one is a Recognized Member of the collective a person who wants to write an article must propose it, have the proposal reviewed, write a draft, and respond to feedback before the article would be published.

Within the R community, it's a lot easier to register as a blog with r-bloggers.com and start writing articles that are immediately published to the readers of r-bloggers.

Why would someone jump through the hoops to write a Stackoverflow Collectives article when lower friction alternatives to distributing one's content exist?

On the contrary, it seems easier to expand a stackoverflow answer into a blog post that can be published elsewhere, like I did with Estimating the Runtime of an R Script which was based on my answer to How to estimate R script running time?.

The R collective was opened earlier this year, and I am trying to understand the role of articles within the collective.

Unless one is a Recognized Member of the collective a person who wants to write an article must propose it, have the proposal reviewed, write a draft, and respond to feedback before the article would be published.

Within the R community, it's a lot easier to register as a blog with r-bloggers.com and start writing articles that are immediately published to the readers of R-Bloggers.

Why would someone jump through the hoops to write a Stack Overflow Collectives article when lower friction alternatives to distributing one's content exist?

On the contrary, it seems easier to expand a Stack Overflow answer into a blog post that can be published elsewhere, like I did with Estimating the Runtime of an R Script which was based on my answer to How to estimate R script running time?.

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Len Greski
  • 10.8k
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Why would I write a Collectives article instead of a blog post?

The R collective was opened earlier this year, and I am trying to understand the role of articles within the collective.

Unless one is a Recognized Member of the collective a person who wants to write an article must propose it, have the proposal reviewed, write a draft, and respond to feedback before the article would be published.

Within the R community, it's a lot easier to register as a blog with r-bloggers.com and start writing articles that are immediately published to the readers of r-bloggers.

Why would someone jump through the hoops to write a Stackoverflow Collectives article when lower friction alternatives to distributing one's content exist?

On the contrary, it seems easier to expand a stackoverflow answer into a blog post that can be published elsewhere, like I did with Estimating the Runtime of an R Script which was based on my answer to How to estimate R script running time?.