well, I know it says "it looks exactly like it's supposed to look" but I see a typo (only one) and I don't think that is related to the visual aspect of it
@easwee normally I would say okay and bow down but I don't see any other typos so I doubt regex was in a typographical error-inducing mood during that post
I would feel remiss for various reasons were I to do it in the current situation
1. the typo still stands in the post, 2. It's not my place to reprint the t-shirts and send them out as a lowly member of SO, 3. I don't have the legal right to print that design, most likely, 4. I don't have the addresses of the ~two dozen people who earned them.
@TylerH Then forget about it. I don't think SE is interested in going through all this trouble just to fix one typo that wasn't caught in the first year
@Mr.Alien Looks like you would have to do it yourself. From the site: "Easy styling thanks to SVG - All the images are downloadable in a vector format, so you can easily tweak colors, rotation and adjust effects like blur, bevels or shadows."
If the site is treating me like a robot, that's not very good
I'm a human; I shouldn't be catching automated attempts to stop robotic behavior
I would prefer a team of more-highly-qualified reviewers (moderators? Nah, they have too much on their plate, so I've been told) to handle review audits using human eyes rather than automated code being in charge.
and I think humans are more reliable than the computer; they can draw from more information and therefore are more trustworthy to permaban people from reviewing suggested edits
such auditors could make decisions on split reviews (two approve, two deny), automatically audit users who have abnormally high approve or deny percentages (use statistics and math to determine the amount; I'd ballpark >= 90% for approval and >= 50% for denial)
well, the suggestion I'm thinking of now is only considering suggested edit review queue
When something works great/smoothly I usually have very little to say abou tit
@ZachSaucier the method I'm proposing would be entirely different. Audits now aren't actually audits; they're random "tests"
and they're entirely too easy to spot
the method I'm fleshing out here would be true audits. People who have the role/ability of auditors to go through other peoples' review history and make decisions on whether those people are allowed to continue reviewing or not
a passed audit means you aren't up for being picked at random for another set period of time; the more edits you review, the higher your chance of being picked at random for an audit, etc.
perhaps some time; SO owners seem disinterested in improving the quality of the site these days
@WesleyCrushed so far, very exhausting. Spent the last 3 days driving hours and hours, packing and loading / unloading cars, buying furniture, and dragging everything to the 2nd floor
@ZachSaucier Well, currently SO owners are OK with a high number of posts in CV Review, as evidenced by the fact that there are always tons of posts in the queue, and they've done little to change it.
So taking people away from the review pool doesn't seem like a detraction in that case