Anyone else noticed home/end don't work to navigate to the start/end of a transcript? I find this a little annoying when popping back into a chat and wanting to jump to the bottom to see the latest messages.
@Joren My point was to confirm your last point about things being in one place, by citing my post where I ironically suggested starring balpha's chain of comments (which isn't easy if they're separate)
Just like the actual Q&A sites (maybe even more so), chat needs a way to govern itself, i.e. put much of the moderating duties in the hand of the community, and not only a tiny group of moderators. That's why chat, just like the main sites, has a flagging system that enables (almost) anybody ...
Reproducably? From the top of my head, I can't think of a connection between the two ("timeout" is your regular AJAX timeout as reported to the $.ajax() failure callback)
> Rooms will exist indefinitely, so long as there is at least one person actively talking in the room. A room is considered worth retaining if it has more than 15 messages by at least 2 users.
> Rooms not worth retaining which are inactive for 7 days will be deleted. Rooms worth retaining which are inactive for 14 days will be frozen. Frozen rooms do not allow any new messages to be sent, and are not shown in the default room list to prevent cluttering the rooms interface.
'A room is considered worth retaining if it has more than 15 messages by at least 2 users.' If that's the exact definition, sure, but I know better than to assume that informal specifications in a FAQ are exact. :)
In that FAQ by the way, it shows examples of how frozen and deleted rooms look. Wouldn't it be better to also show an example of a normal room, for comparison?
@Joren The colour scheme is site-dependent though, so you'd need separate samples for each chat. I think it's sufficient enough for illustrative purposes not to warrant the extra maintenance involved. :)
For historical purposes: Tim helped me figure it out. The feed URL (someone) had pasted in there had a ?sort=new applied to it, which was breaking things.