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replaced http://meta.stackoverflow.com/ with https://meta.stackoverflow.com/

I have to agree with this, if somewhat grudgingly.

A few years ago we had Jeff, who would almost always weigh in to a discussion on a bug report or feature request. Inevitably, of course, he'd then slap the on it and that would be that.

Now there's no Jeff, and the queue of feature requests and bug reports is a little longer. That's fine. Even if I were to suggest that devs spend more time going through that than on bold enterprises like:

(which I'm not, particularly) it would be a different question entirely.

For the here and now, I think the issue is one of engagement. Nobody's asking for "okay, I've read this" on every post — Shog, you're right in that this would be utterly pointless and irritatingly noisy.

But on my company Bugzilla, when someone posts a new bug against products I own, even when it's a meaty one that I'm not going to be fixing right away, or a feature request that requires further discussion and thought, I always post my initial thoughts on it as soon as possible. This may just be a sentence like "we're unlikely to end up doing this because X", or "personally I think this is a fairly good idea", or "yeah, this doesn't sound like expected behaviour to me either".

You don't have to go into massive detail or commit to anything, but acknowledging the post begins a cycle of feedback that helps the quality assurance team to feel like they're not just talking to a brick wall. And, on Stack Exchange, we're your quality assurance team.

(Disclaimer: This does already happen, of course, in a bunch of cases. And frankly I'm not particularly bothered by any of this. I think overall the devs do pretty well on meta. But the above is my cold and calculating analysis of the question at hand…)

Lightness Races in Orbit
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