There'sThere are a lot of things in the question I could comment on, but the Library with capital L sticks out.
There's lot of things in the question I could comment on, but the Library with capital L sticks out.
There are a lot of things in the question I could comment on, but the Library with capital L sticks out.
- Careful peer review of language and content. Often by actual domain experts.
- Demanding sources for everything claimed.
- Searchable site with categorization of articles and topics easily browsed.
- No clutter, addsads or other nonsense.
(Except it actually isn't,isn't; the vast majority of questions on SO is not anywhere close to that.)
The artificial Q&A format makes it hard to post actual canonical, high-quality content. It makes it hard to search. It distracts from the actual topic.
Q&A is a great format for personal use: one person has a localized, specific problem and seeks help with solving it from technical experts. But canonical/great article, etc. is the opposite of that. They cannot be localized, but must address multiple use-cases cases, so that the reader can recognize that their specific situation is a flavour of what the "canonical" is about when they encounter it themselves.
Peer review by actual experts happens, but it often leads to arguing and conflicts. The rep system is one reason for that,that; people post an answer for the purpose of posting their answer, not the answer. It's not ten experts gathering together to post the ultimate answer,answer; it's a few experts (and a lot of students) writing different answers in parallel. Again, both the Q&A format and the reputation system are found unsuitable and counter-productive for producing "canonical" content.
We do have "community wiki", but few use it because of the reputation system. By site design, the ambition of the user base isn't to produce a Library but to gain rep, or otherwise every post would be a community wiki.
Posting sources becomes problematic because the site by design demands that posts add value to this site. Thus someone wildly speculating in a long answer based on their personal believesbeliefs is rewarded over the one who read a book/article about the topic from an expert and just briefly refers to it.
The tag system is completely dysfunctional when it comes to categorization, searching and sorting. It is too blunt, too poorly moderated (anyone and their mother can create a tag), doesn't support ways to build category trees with sub-topics, etc., etc. And very few moderate or write content for the tag wikis.
Anyone can post about anything. No expertise or skills are required. You don't need to know spelling, you don't need to know programming, and you don't need to know the basics of human-to-human interaction. Whereas a credible encyclopaedia will be very careful regarding who they allow to write articles. Anyone who remember the "Documentation Project" can tell why.
The "social media feed" design isn't helpful for anything else but spewing endless floods of random content. It is impossible to find anything specific quickly and good posts that might have helped towards the "Library" ambition drown in the flood of crap. Even good posts that did receive lots of attention with good answers at the time posted, also drown - there is nodrown—there isn't any obvious way for people interested in that specific topic to find it. At best, you land on the page from Google.
As addressed in your question, posts do age, but they cannot be updated because this isn't Wikipedia and every answerer "owns" their own content, to some extent. It is not owned by SO or "the community" - SOcommunity"—SO just holds the rights to publish it indefinitely.
So I would recommend to give up this "Library" idea, this. This site is not a suitable place for it and it never was. Literally nobody in the whole world benefits from designing a much worse version of Wikipedia.
- Careful peer review of language and content. Often by actual domain experts.
- Demanding sources for everything claimed.
- Searchable site with categorization of articles and topics easily browsed.
- No clutter, adds or other nonsense.
(Except it actually isn't, the vast majority of questions on SO not anywhere close to that.)
The artificial Q&A format makes it hard to post actual canonical, high-quality content. It makes it hard to search. It distracts from the actual topic.
Q&A is a great format for personal use: one person has a localized, specific problem and seeks help with solving it from technical experts. But canonical/great article etc is the opposite of that. They cannot be localized but must address multiple use-cases so that the reader can recognize that their specific situation is a flavour of what the "canonical" is about when they encounter it themselves.
Peer review by actual experts happens, but it often leads to arguing and conflicts. The rep system is one reason for that, people post an answer for the purpose of posting their answer, not the answer. It's not ten experts gathering together to post the ultimate answer, it's a few experts (and a lot of students) writing different answers in parallel. Again, both the Q&A format and the reputation system are found unsuitable and counter-productive for producing "canonical" content.
We do have "community wiki" but few use it because of the reputation system. By site design, the ambition of the user base isn't to produce a Library but to gain rep, or otherwise every post would be a community wiki.
Posting sources becomes problematic because the site by design demands that posts add value to this site. Thus someone wildly speculating in a long answer based on their personal believes is rewarded over the one who read a book/article about the topic from an expert and just briefly refers to it.
The tag system is completely dysfunctional when it comes to categorization, searching and sorting. It is too blunt, too poorly moderated (anyone and their mother can create a tag), doesn't support ways to build category trees with sub-topics etc etc. And very few moderate or write content for the tag wikis.
Anyone can post about anything. No expertise or skills required. You don't need to know spelling, you don't need to know programming, you don't need to know the basics of human-to-human interaction. Whereas credible encyclopaedia will be very careful regarding who they allow to write articles. Anyone who remember the "Documentation Project" can tell why.
The "social media feed" design isn't helpful for anything else but spewing endless floods of random content. It is impossible to find anything specific quickly and good posts that might have helped towards the "Library" ambition drown in the flood of crap. Even good posts that did receive lots of attention with good answers at the time posted, also drown - there is no obvious way for people interested in that specific topic to find it. At best, you land on the page from Google.
As addressed in your question, posts do age but cannot be updated because this isn't Wikipedia and every answerer "owns" their own content, to some extent. It is not owned by SO or "the community" - SO just holds the rights to publish it indefinitely.
So I would recommend to give up this "Library" idea, this site is not a suitable place for it and it never was. Literally nobody in the whole world benefits from designing a much worse version of Wikipedia.
- Careful peer review of language and content. Often by actual domain experts.
- Demanding sources for everything claimed.
- Searchable site with categorization of articles and topics easily browsed.
- No clutter, ads or other nonsense.
(Except it actually isn't; the vast majority of questions on SO is not anywhere close to that.)
The artificial Q&A format makes it hard to post actual canonical, high-quality content. It makes it hard to search. It distracts from the actual topic.
Q&A is a great format for personal use: one person has a localized, specific problem and seeks help with solving it from technical experts. But canonical/great article, etc. is the opposite of that. They cannot be localized, but must address multiple use cases, so that the reader can recognize that their specific situation is a flavour of what the "canonical" is about when they encounter it themselves.
Peer review by actual experts happens, but it often leads to arguing and conflicts. The rep system is one reason for that; people post an answer for the purpose of posting their answer, not the answer. It's not ten experts gathering together to post the ultimate answer; it's a few experts (and a lot of students) writing different answers in parallel. Again, both the Q&A format and the reputation system are found unsuitable and counter-productive for producing "canonical" content.
We do have "community wiki", but few use it because of the reputation system. By site design, the ambition of the user base isn't to produce a Library but to gain rep, or otherwise every post would be a community wiki.
Posting sources becomes problematic because the site by design demands that posts add value to this site. Thus someone wildly speculating in a long answer based on their personal beliefs is rewarded over the one who read a book/article about the topic from an expert and just briefly refers to it.
The tag system is completely dysfunctional when it comes to categorization, searching and sorting. It is too blunt, too poorly moderated (anyone and their mother can create a tag), doesn't support ways to build category trees with sub-topics, etc., etc. And very few moderate or write content for the tag wikis.
Anyone can post about anything. No expertise or skills are required. You don't need to know spelling, you don't need to know programming, and you don't need to know the basics of human-to-human interaction. Whereas a credible encyclopaedia will be very careful regarding who they allow to write articles. Anyone who remember the "Documentation Project" can tell why.
The "social media feed" design isn't helpful for anything else but spewing endless floods of random content. It is impossible to find anything specific quickly and good posts that might have helped towards the "Library" ambition drown in the flood of crap. Even good posts that did receive lots of attention with good answers at the time posted, also drown—there isn't any obvious way for people interested in that specific topic to find it. At best, you land on the page from Google.
As addressed in your question, posts do age, but they cannot be updated because this isn't Wikipedia and every answerer "owns" their own content, to some extent. It is not owned by SO or "the community"—SO just holds the rights to publish it indefinitely.
So I would recommend to give up this "Library" idea. This site is not a suitable place for it and it never was. Literally nobody in the whole world benefits from designing a much worse version of Wikipedia.
There's lot of things in the question I could comment on, but the Library with capital L sticks out.
We know that any site which claims to have an ambition to be such a Library must have a clear quality criteria. For those who would use Internet as a source back in the 1990s, you might remember that if you quoted something from Wikipedia, you would just get laughed at. It wasn't a credible source, it lacked moderation and expertise, it was overall questionable at best. Like the Internet as whole back then, it was mostly maintained by computer nerds.
But as soon as Internet became more mainstream around year 2000 and common people started to use it, Wikipedia quickly stepped up their game and is nowadays one of the most credible online sources, a serious competitor to traditional encyclopaedias. This was made possible by:
- Careful peer review of language and content. Often by actual domain experts.
- Demanding sources for everything claimed.
- Searchable site with categorization of articles and topics easily browsed.
- No clutter, adds or other nonsense.
SO cannot be some Library, because the site was not designed for that purpose. Rather, it was explicitly designed to help programmers with the every day technical problems they are facing. To quote Joel Spolsky upon launch:
Every question in Stack Overflow is like the Wikipedia article for some extremely narrow, specific programming question.
(Except it actually isn't, the vast majority of questions on SO not anywhere close to that.)
Then much later down the line some "meta people" minted the ambition of SO to provide a library of knowledge and it became a popular notion, to the point where it apparently even made it all the way into the newbie tour.
Some of the problems when attempting to be some Library:
The artificial Q&A format makes it hard to post actual canonical, high-quality content. It makes it hard to search. It distracts from the actual topic.
Q&A is a great format for personal use: one person has a localized, specific problem and seeks help with solving it from technical experts. But canonical/great article etc is the opposite of that. They cannot be localized but must address multiple use-cases so that the reader can recognize that their specific situation is a flavour of what the "canonical" is about when they encounter it themselves.
Peer review by actual experts happens, but it often leads to arguing and conflicts. The rep system is one reason for that, people post an answer for the purpose of posting their answer, not the answer. It's not ten experts gathering together to post the ultimate answer, it's a few experts (and a lot of students) writing different answers in parallel. Again, both the Q&A format and the reputation system are found unsuitable and counter-productive for producing "canonical" content.
We do have "community wiki" but few use it because of the reputation system. By site design, the ambition of the user base isn't to produce a Library but to gain rep, or otherwise every post would be a community wiki.
Posting sources becomes problematic because the site by design demands that posts add value to this site. Thus someone wildly speculating in a long answer based on their personal believes is rewarded over the one who read a book/article about the topic from an expert and just briefly refers to it.
The tag system is completely dysfunctional when it comes to categorization, searching and sorting. It is too blunt, too poorly moderated (anyone and their mother can create a tag), doesn't support ways to build category trees with sub-topics etc etc. And very few moderate or write content for the tag wikis.
Anyone can post about anything. No expertise or skills required. You don't need to know spelling, you don't need to know programming, you don't need to know the basics of human-to-human interaction. Whereas credible encyclopaedia will be very careful regarding who they allow to write articles. Anyone who remember the "Documentation Project" can tell why.
The "social media feed" design isn't helpful for anything else but spewing endless floods of random content. It is impossible to find anything specific quickly and good posts that might have helped towards the "Library" ambition drown in the flood of crap. Even good posts that did receive lots of attention with good answers at the time posted, also drown - there is no obvious way for people interested in that specific topic to find it. At best, you land on the page from Google.
As addressed in your question, posts do age but cannot be updated because this isn't Wikipedia and every answerer "owns" their own content, to some extent. It is not owned by SO or "the community" - SO just holds the rights to publish it indefinitely.
So I would recommend to give up this "Library" idea, this site is not a suitable place for it and it never was. Literally nobody in the whole world benefits from designing a much worse version of Wikipedia.