Timeline for Is the voting culture on SO different than other SE sites?
Current License: CC BY-SA 4.0
13 events
when toggle format | what | by | license | comment | |
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Jul 27 at 12:55 | comment | added | Syed M. Sannan | @Gimby I couldn't resist my urge to write a comment to appreciate this. Very well put! | |
Jul 26 at 10:05 | history | edited | E_net4 | CC BY-SA 4.0 |
clarify the first graph from the SEDE query description
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Jul 26 at 9:41 | comment | added | Gimby | Making a split between old gen and new gen is relevant, but I'd also say there is a middle gen. In my eyes, and meta more and more frequently proves this, the actual old gen think of the site as it was when they signed up; pretty much the wild west with few rules. They operate in a bubble and just answer whatever they please as they've always done. Old gen is starting to realize now what middle gen already knows; they are painfully aware of how Stack Overflow grew and its many rule changes and tries to adhere to them strictly to this day. While the new gen just want this site to be Reddit. | |
Jul 25 at 22:07 | comment | added | starball | @KarlKnechtel What Happened to Stack Overflow in 2014?. Abdul, see data.stackexchange.com/stackoverflow/query/1853304#graph | |
Jul 25 at 20:31 | comment | added | Karl Knechtel | What on earth happened in... looks like early 2015? | |
Jul 25 at 15:17 | comment | added | Abdul Aziz Barkat | "We can see this with the amount of votes per month" is a very misleading summary for that particular query. That query shows "the number of votes questions got within the month they were posted". So it's not "amount of votes per month" which would be much more considering votes which are older than months as well as votes on answers. | |
Jul 25 at 14:58 | comment | added | E_net4 | One thing worth emphasizing is that the first graph only shows votes on questions (rather than votes on all kinds of posts). | |
Jul 25 at 14:45 | comment | added | Elikill58 | For this point, you're not wrong. It's more difficult now to keep your post opened than at the beginning, almost everything were allowed (we can see it with bad posts from 2011 closed few month ago...). Also, I didn't explain it in the answer, but the "users are leaving" is also about the direction of SO and multiple issue with Staff/decision etc that can lead users that were investing time into SO to leave the community and continue as simple user without really take the time to interact | |
Jul 25 at 14:43 | comment | added | bad_coder | I also don't agree with the negativeness that users are leaving and the first generation was the best and voted a lot more. Because that doesn't account for the thousands of off-topic posts that got lots of upvotes and were completely useless, opinion-based, trivial, duplicate, etc... The main fact is that posting has gotten harder as repositories mature and the Q&A programming marketplace has more competition than when SO started and enjoyed a near monopoly. | |
Jul 25 at 14:43 | comment | added | Elikill58 | @bad_coder Yes it could be completed with more analysis. But, as now there is all previous posts that are already valuable and can still get votes. So, we have more users, more posts but less votes. We know the amount of vote/post will decrease. And this need lot of research, but that's the job of SO staff ;) | |
Jul 25 at 14:40 | comment | added | bad_coder | This analyses is fundamentally incomplete because the main factor is votes/time/post. You'd have to normalize per post, and for a broader picture it'd be necessary to consider views/post and correlate that with members/(total number of posts) to account for RyanM's hypothesis that repository size dilutes attention/post and thus votes/post | |
Jul 25 at 14:27 | history | edited | E_net4 | CC BY-SA 4.0 |
improve phrasing
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Jul 25 at 13:30 | history | answered | Elikill58 | CC BY-SA 4.0 |