I flagged an answer as "Not an Answer" for a link only answer, and a moderator declined it due to "lack of evidence". How do I build a case of evidence to show the mod that there is no content to this answer? Even comments like "For those not interested in digging through the wiki" exemplify the fact that the links are not even focused on the question at hand, but are generic, "here's the documentation, wallow around in it for awhile and maybe the answer is in there" links.
My understanding of answers containing a link, that the community seems to agree on, is that they at least contain a minimum of some conceptual description of the answer, and be a link that is focused specifically on the question at hand. Not just links to documentation that address a vast superset, that do not even have one sentence that describes the solution conceptually.
Comments like "So every time page renders (when I start the hub), I have to update my list of users with new clientId?" exemplify the fact that users are left to guess even at the conceptual solution.
Just a few sentences that describe the conceptual solution to accompany the links would have been enough to meet what (in my opinion) is a very low bar for what it takes to be an answer.
https://stackoverflow.com/a/7872685/84206
There's more to determining if it is an answer than just link rot.
This has an intersection of two really bad things: no conceptual description of the solution AND the link does not focus on the solution. It's not just missing one of those things; it's missing both, and I thought there was at least a minimum for asking people to meet those very-easy-to-meet minimums.
If it were a link to an article/tutorial that addressed the question directly and described a solution, then it wouldn't be half as bad in the absence of a conceptual description in the answer, but the links are not even that focused.
This question is about as good as having said "Google persistent connections and hubs and read the documentation or RTFM".
At the very least, the discussion in comments should have prompted them to add a little more concept to the answer.