This room is an odd thing in the SE universe. It's an enclave of what's close to a democracy, if not anarchy, in the middle of a huge and sometimes harshly oppressive empire. I'd like to preserve it that way, because I like the room a lot the way it is. Nevertheless, at the size we've grown into, I feel that this now needs some structure.
If the rest of you regulars (by whatever definition) disagrees with me on the ten users rule, I'm ready to accept that. All I am asking for is: Agree an alternative criterion instead that's up to the spirit of this room. I'd hate to see this experiment fail. (Not just to spite Jeff, although I free admit that his autocratic attitude is an important incentive. :^>)
So what say you? How are we going to discuss this to give everybody a chance to have their say? How are we going to decide if it's not an obvious agreement?
Summoning the regulars that are here or on that list: @Dead, @Xeo, @Tony, @Stacked, @jalf, @Alf, @RMartinho, @Cat, @FredOverflow, @Luc?
We would have three dozen room owners by now (at the very least), if I wouldn't kick off users now and then — and I have taken a lot of heat for that. I don't want to be the only one to take the blame for that anymore.
I'd say just use the 10 frequently users + a bit of gut feeling. Since the bottom end fluctuates a lot, no point in kicking and re-adding the same users every half hour
if you're off the list, you're a candidate for being cut. But if we suspect that you'll probably bounce back onto the frequent list soon enough, the owners currently on the frequent list might choose to give you a "grace period"
@jalf Nobody was proposing that. Usually I go to clean out the owner list whenever the subject comes up, which has been everything between twice a month and once in three months. And I'm fine with continuing to do it this way. That would allow some fluctuation. All I want is a decision to point at when someone gets "excited" about being kicked off.
@jalf That seems a good one to me.
@jalf At the owners' discretion. I don't want a rule that forces me to add some asshole to the list because he's been posting a lot for a fortnight.
@sbi yeah, that's what I mean. If you're on the list, and want to be an owner, that's your right, so just point it out to an existing owner. If you're off the list, you can be removed if the other owners think you're unlikely to bounce back
honestly, I'm fine with a simple "owners decide" too, I just thought the point was to make a rule we can refer to if people complain that they should be made owners
I like to consider my self a some what regular fellow here. Personally I don't care to a room owner, unless there is something I don't know about. But I think the current system is good, those who use the room regularly get to exert a bit a power towards keeping it the way they want it. Though I would like to see perhaps some sort of elected room owner, for people a bit like me in terms of usage, but in a time zone where most of the other room owners are not online
can always add a special cause that "in extraordinary cases, owners will decide", but again, then people will get blame the person who rejects them for ownership
@thecoshman you're on the frequent users list now. No need to be elected for anything :p
anyway, as I see it there are two reasons for controlling the owners list: (1) at least one owner needs to exist, in order for the room to stay alive, and (2) an "evil" owner could cause a lot of trouble
@thecoshman See, I think this is the problem. Everybody thinks they're here frequently. You are not, according to my gut feeling. Had someone put you on that list, and I kicked you off, that might get us a bit of storm here.
@TonyTheLion I have to admit that you have a point there. OTOH, so far I feel like I was the only one who ever kicked anybody off the owner list. So you guys would have to do something to live up to that ideal.
@DeadMG There's no truly private rooms here. Everybody can read everywhere.
and a "bad" owner will ignore all the voting stuff anyway. So you'd be delaying those who do the sensible thing, without in any way limiting those who want to wreck the room
@user800454 You're not supposed to invent your own dynamic memory allocator. You'd waste several decades getting it reasonably reliable and performant.
@DeadMG problems when debugging de-allocation and when there is fragmented memory. Some garbage collectors even intelligently predict when memory will be used this is the reason that C# and Java can be faster sometimes.
there are a couple other room owners that I don't think I have ever seen. But I don't see the harm in leaving them on the list; other then trying to keep it neat
@user800454 Bwahahahaha. C# and Java have completely different memory systems than C++ and it's not even comparable, and they're not as fast by a long way
@DeadMG also problem from defragmented free memory blocks. But can be optimized when you know the size of the memory you want to allocated small means reuse and big means use another area for allocaion. This can also be hardware dependent
@user800454 Firstly, GC in general can be competitive with native allocators, but C# and Java force slow semantics in many, many cases and their bytecode interpretation is not as fast as C++'s native code execution.
How is the frequent users calculated do you know? If one of the definitely regular regulars was to so go on holiday and fall of the frequent users list, would you insist on removing them from the owners list?
@thecoshman Number of messages here + last time seen here, a function of that basically. Atleast it seems like that. Maybe add the amount of time they spent here
Ok, since the discussion seems to have dried up, I'll try to recap what I think is the outcome of this discussion.
1. Frequent users are likely to become owners, although actual ownership is by the discretion of the owners. 2. Frequency is determined by the frequent users tab. 3. We are lenient with kicking people off, but whoever falls off the frequent users list might be kicked off at any time.
Did I get anything wrong? Did I forget anything? @Dead, @Xeo, @Tony, @Stacked, @jalf, @Alf, @RMartinho, @Cat, @FredOverflow, @Luc?
I would also say that bitching about being removed from owners list is considered reason enough to not get back on the list. Though you are still free to speak out if you feel it was unjust and doing so will should not be held against you, just dont go on and on about it
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@TonyTheLion and suddenly all is better in the world :D