I'm new to Stack Exchange and I have a question to ask. I arrived at the main homepage and couldn't see any list of sub-sites, just a list of random questions.
Then I noticed a button saying "Learn more", which took me to a page called "Tour", at the bottom of which was another button saying "See all sites". I clicked on this, not sure what to expect, and found what appeared to be a "list" of all the different sub-sites, though no page title was given, so this is a guess.
My question concerns computer software, so I clicked "Technology", but there's still about 100 different sites.
Presumably, users can't reasonably be expected to read through all 100 site titles? Especially since:
- They're not organized into any sub-categories
- Most of them have esoteric, non-descriptive names like "Super User" "Ask Different" and "Tex LaTeX"
- They're not laid out in an easy-to-read list, but in a haphazard arrangement of rectangles, which is totally contrary to quickly skimming through a list of titles.
So, my question is, how is anyone (particularly new users) reasonably expected to find the correct sub-site to post their question in?
on-topic
page. This would require a lot of work and frequent updates, but it would help a lot of people who come on the site I moderate because they have no idea where else to post. Of course, one of the flowchart's end will be "There is no site where your question is on-topic, try other Internet forums".