12:30 AM
No, the Work Council (Bundesrat) has zero interest about the web forums used by the workers. They have near-zero interest on the communicaition/knowledge share things used by the teams (like sharepoint, jira, or SO teams). They have interest on their wage, mass lay-offs (Abbau) and similars. — peterh 23 secs ago
12:46 AM
2 hours later…
2:26 AM
We don't want humor like the heisenbug tag, because humor is noise, but we're quite happy with humor like using the word burninate and imagry like Trogdor. Seems there's a bit of a double standard here. — Phil 31 secs ago
3:02 AM
@Phil Yes, there is a double standard. this is Meta, which is typically much more relaxed and has much more room for humor than the main site. — NobodyNada 18 secs ago
2 hours later…
4:56 AM
What about email (something that can potentially reach all if forwarded)? All receivers can see when it was send and for email threads, who responded and when. — Peter Mortensen 1 min ago
What about email (something that can potentially reach all if forwarded)? All receivers can see when it was send and for email threads, who responded and when. And any kind of chat (Skype chat, Slack) reveals availability (essentially when you are at work, at meetings, etc.) and presumably time stamps. — Peter Mortensen 20 secs ago
Stats at the start of featuring: Q: +29/-2. A1 (Saying yes) +2/0. A2 (Saying yes) +3/0. — Bhargav Rao ♦ 1 min ago
5:38 AM
@Raedwald if you're talking about recent closed questions, the only way for them to get a delete vote is to have score under -3. When such a low score is deserved this means question looks worthy of a delete vote, and these can be cast by 20K users totally organically. The spike you observe seems to be merely a side effect of a running experiment that led to quicker closures of such questions - which also increases their chances to be discovered by 20Kers when they simply look for recent questions to answer — gnat 5 secs ago
5:52 AM
@jthill you might be interested in this ancient proposal. It addresses this by giving more votes to tag badge holders (since more active tags tend to have more badge holders, this essentially means more votes to such tags compared to less active ones) — gnat 1 min ago
6:06 AM
...imagine you're a 20Ker looking for questions to answer in your tag and you come by a low quality queston at -3 or lower. Prior to experiment it would likely hang open, maybe with 1-2 close votes - so you'd simply move on (maybe casting a vote down / close). As of now, it is likely closed (or has 2 votes already so that you can close it). That makes it possible for you to cast a delete vote, why not — gnat 25 secs ago
6:42 AM
Dispute in review, but it was closed from outside the queue. Doesn't change your flag response, but disputed flags don't affect you negatively — Zoe 14 secs ago
@rene does seem to sound like the same issue. Seems as though this might be a mac related issue. — Nick Parsons 48 secs ago
My company allows timestamps in e-mails, but generally it is hard get some working software that displays (can track internally and aggregate) users actions along with the timestamps. However, it is not clear if this is also a requirement for optional software (e.g. e-mail or JIRA are mandatory where I work, I intend to implement SO for Teams as fully optional). — Alexei 1 min ago
@Zoe Thanks for the response . But Can anyone change the disputed to helpful. — Angel Syrus F 8 secs ago
We need the exact time of your flag but my guess is that your flag caused the Triage review and that outcome was Looks OK, disputing your flag: stackoverflow.com/posts/57550658/timeline — rene 47 secs ago
@rene Please check my screenshot it shows how many hours ago only. How do I get the exact time? — Angel Syrus F 1 min ago
Please check the question it put into hold from the last 45 minutes only and I flagged 1 hour ago. And now my flagging page showing 2 hours ago — Angel Syrus F 1 min ago
Here are the screenshots. Please check it imgur.com/a/biRW4oa , imgur.com/2QKBgyQ — Angel Syrus F 33 secs ago
I can confirm the disputed outcome was due to the triage review (simultaneous timestamps). — Samuel Liew ♦ 1 min ago
Well, the two linked questions for duplication do not have any answer like the one of the * duplicated * question. One have a solution with only
if / else
which is exactly what the OP wanted to avoid. The other doesn't even have an accepted answer. And finally none of the answers uses Map
and Predicate
. — Arnaud Claudel 1 min ago7:36 AM
@ArnaudClaudel No wonder SO looks unwelcoming to newcomers. We heavily downvoted it, we closed it, we deleted it (again), we attached some (not really related or helpful) links to justify ourselves, and we moved on leaving the OP wondering what they've done wrong and what they should have corrected. "Try harder next time, kid." — Andrew Tobilko 1 min ago
1 hour later…
8:42 AM
@Shog9 I think I understand. In this experiment you're studying giving more impact to organic votes (as opposed to improving review), this definitely looks worth exploring. However this approach has sort of a gap on questions that have organic visibility limited by a system - ie score under -4 and triaged - I have a suspicion that these can be timely handled only via review (of course if you're OK with keeping askers oblivious you can let 'em be slowly collected by 30- and 365-days roomba) — gnat 1 min ago
9:14 AM
Regarding stack-related questions, there may very well be architectures that name their instructions some flavour of "pop". We might want to separate CPU stacks from the abstract data type "stack". Questions regarding pop instructions on CPU level should rather be re-tagged with the relevant CPU architecture + the assembly tag. — Lundin 1 min ago
9:38 AM
I would suspect that this makes it impossible to use SO Teams not only in Germany but anywhere in the EU. Until SO officially drops the "ad experiment" they launched this summer (or if Google surprisingly develop ethics overnight), I think they'll have a hard time demonstrating GDPR compliance. Are ads shown in Teams too? — Lundin 1 min ago
@Lundin I can't speak for everyone, but most companies I know, including small companies, mandate adblock or at least offer it for all company pcs and browsers. For some even multi-layer adblock is required for all user with only limited whitelist capability. So this is probably an intra-organizational issue if one at all. — Magisch 29 secs ago
@Lundin Also, the followup from the team on this might be of interest to you here: meta.stackexchange.com/questions/332229/… the long and short of it is this is a service provided by a third party ad platform and SE considers it ok despite it using fingerprinting and recording IPs. — Magisch 16 secs ago
@Lundin - I see no ads in Stack Overflow for Teams except those for the Public Stack Overflow itself (e.g. return to Stack Overflow and a plethora of links at the bottom of the page). — Alexei 53 secs ago
10:36 AM
I think gnat has hit the problem on its head: “on-hold” questions with negative scores still need time to be fixed. No one can reasonably argue deleting it that fast gave the OP time to fix it. At that point it’d vanish from them unless they could find it in their browser history. — George Stocker ♦ 1 min ago
10:50 AM
@JL2210: I think you are trying to make a point about correct grammatical use but you are creating more confusion because you didn't include a clear explanation about the point you are trying to make. — Martijn Pieters ♦ 24 secs ago
@gnat That proposal is orthogonal to what jthill was saying. jthill was saying that it should be easier to close questions in low traffic tags, because there are not that many users in those tags. While I voted-up years ago the answer of yours which you linked, it doesn't really address making it require action by fewer people per question in low traffic tags compared to the number of people needed to act in high traffic tags. Your proposal isn't affected by the tag being low traffic or high traffic. That proposal makes the same changes in both. — Makyen 25 secs ago
11:22 AM
@Makyen I see, thanks for explaining (at first read I interpreted it like you did but on re-reading it seemed opposite) — gnat 23 secs ago
11:38 AM
@JL2210: but that's not what the sentence is saying. It is saying: there is an answer here: [link], [link], .... It doesn't state that the links themselves are an answer, the links are the here locations where you can find the answer to the question. That you have to go to multiple links to find it doesn't make the sentence grammatically incorrect. — Martijn Pieters ♦ 50 secs ago
12:18 PM
Seeing as noone has notified the user that was addressed originally in a visible comment I am leaving this reply @BonzaiThePenguin about this comment from the staff member: "[...] Do you mind telling me whether you are in the US or international? Knowing this will help me troubleshoot the issue that you are experiencing. It’s not common that a frequency capped ad campaign would subvert the system parameters." — Secespitus 9 secs ago
@GeorgeStocker When thinking about the problems that other staff members are describing lately I don't think there is a problem with a staff member using basically anonymous accounts for discussing this issue. Not like this interaction seems to be very troublesome, but I don't see any need for a "real name" or even a "username". The indicator outside of the profile would be nice though, but staff members could just as well use the old "I am part of the XYZ team at Stackoverflow" at the beginning, possibly linking to their profile to make it easier to see for others who are unaware of the box — Secespitus 25 secs ago
2 hours later…
1:58 PM
Imo, Copy is the best way to go. Because you have a snapshot of the Question answer and no future modification will impact your Team SO. So you don't have to check every time someone add a new answer or edit an existing one. — xdtTransform 45 secs ago
This is the second XSS hole I've learned of in the last few months. (The previous one was one that Cody stumbled across in the mod tools, and posted about here without appreciating its significance.) Can I suggest that it'd be a really good idea for one of you to do an audit of your codebase for XSS holes? Even spending an hour or two just doing some regex searches of your codebase for spots where values get templated/formatted/concatenated into HTML and then skimming them by eye to see if the values are escaped would probably have caught these last two bugs. — Mark Amery 1 min ago
@weegee I suspect there's no exploitable XSS hole here because I think the missing escaping is only in the question wizard, which only ever shows your own content to you (thus only allowing the user to XSS themselves). So: sloppy, but not a security hole in itself. I'm more worried that the fact that this was able to slip through the net at all (along with a similar bug in the mod tools that Cody posted about a while back and then deleted that I think really was an XSS hole) is probably a giant flashing warning sign that there are other XSS holes lurking in the codebase. — Mark Amery 1 min ago
2:24 PM
"If the SO idea is popular enough, probably a website similar to SO will be developed within the firewal" If China continues to block SO indirectly via googleapis, that would actually make sense. They could also use the content from here (and even give attribution, making a link to a blocked site) and start from there. I wonder if something like this maybe already happened and outside of China simply nobody knows of it. — Trilarion 1 min ago
@GeorgeStocker last time I checked "recent deleted questions" gave users links to these, no need to mess with browser history. And another thing I checked (with my own deleted question) is one can edit these and flag for undeletion — gnat 44 secs ago
Perhaps MSE/Meta.ru.so would be a more appropriate place for this report, since it doesn't affect normal SO. — Erik A 32 secs ago
2:58 PM
3:18 PM
Sure, @gnat. This is where it's helpful to remember that many of these systems only exist because of the limitations of close voting. The close and reopen queues, the Triage queue, reopen queue auto-triggers... would all be unnecessary if a single voter could have confidence that their vote would do something - but they couldn't; already by 2010 it was obvious that, particularly in smaller tags, close voting was just useless as there weren't enough voters. Reopening happened only for popular nuisances. The queues exist because we utterly broke the existing system by adding voting. — Shog9 ♦ 1 min ago
It doesn't really look like a problem you're having; it's asking where the documentation for the solution you already got resides. Ideally, good answers should have that, but we focus on solving the problem itself. Asking another question for people to source the solution isn't really a question. — fbueckert 12 secs ago
3:46 PM
You asked a question that received an answer which you accepted, and your SO account is still in good standing. Isn't that worth the price of a couple of downvotes and close votes? I don't think there's any more to see here. — Robert Harvey ♦ 1 min ago
3:58 PM
@fbueckert I'm not sure I understood the comment. I didn't have the docs' location at the time I asked a question. I only had the experience of the feature. Or am I missing your point entirely? — DonkeyBanana 1 min ago
Yeah, but is knowing the docs' location an actual programming problem you're experiencing? I'd lean towards not, as you're not actually having a problem with your code. If anything, that source should've been part of the answer on your previous question, and not necessitated a separate question to get that information. — fbueckert 1 min ago
4:38 PM
4:52 PM
I'm happy I did a good job asking. I'm displeased about the "community driven decision". It only proves my point that people are too trigger happy (probably because they're fed up with the questions belonging to the first category of yours). Thanks for the feed-back, anyway. — DonkeyBanana 1 min ago
So we now dig up any ancient, long forgotten optimization trick and ask if it is available in a modern stack. Only the OP and myself probably know what rushmore was and did for foxpro performance. If there are any future visitors that are going to search for that technology I hope they find it before they go extinct ;) — rene 21 secs ago
@GeorgeStocker the OP wanted to know, is there is any optimization technology for LINQ.? They are asking us to find a technology for them and if someone knows it already then that's lucky. — weegee 55 secs ago
@weegee reading the question the OP wanted to know if Linq used an optimization technology they were familiar with. Kinda like "searching for JavaScript's equivalent of Perl's "use"." No one's asking for an off-site resource; they don't have the terminology to know what to call the thing they want to know exists in the language. — George Stocker ♦ just now
@weegee Please point to the off-topic reason that relates to "I know how to do X in Y, but not Z" — George Stocker ♦ 45 secs ago
@GeorgeStocker Exactly And that's what makes it off-topic. they don't have the terminology to know what to call the thing they want to know exists in the language So they ask a question on SO. Like "Is there a thing in java just like ruby had?" Hence they are asking us to find that thing. Off-site resource — weegee 1 min ago
@GeorgeStocker Could you perhaps put a temporary content dispute lock on that question to prevent the Meta effect of downvotes being applied? It's received 6 or 7 since posting. — TylerH 19 secs ago
A direct quote from the question: "I want to know for LINQ-to-Objects, if there is something similar to Rushmore or the index-related performance optimizations in SQL Server?" To me, that looks like the OP is asking "What function do I use to get the same effect as <X>". Imo, it's borderline, but I'd say it's too broad. — Cerbrus 49 secs ago
@rene you can say " the question should be closed", but you'd be hard pressed to close it with a valid reason from our close list without resorting to mental gynmastics. — George Stocker ♦ 1 min ago
You were never suspended for this, you were suspended for being insulting and abusive to others while pointing out what you see as problems with SO's reputation system. The suspension was exclusively for the way in which you delivered your message, not its content. Nobody cares if you want to voice your opinion about reputation or gamification, and regardless of how often you claim some sort of suppression or suspension resulted from this, it's simply not true. — meagar ♦ 1 min ago
@GeorgeStocker: I don't think that specific section of the help section is accurate, nowadays. — Cerbrus 9 secs ago
@GeorgeStocker I'm aware, and considered that in my question. Regardless of which direction the votes are, the point of the lock is exactly for this kind of situation. — TylerH 23 secs ago
@Cerbrus Somewhat confusing to a new person to be told "read the 'tour' and the 'help center' but don't pay attention to what it says?" — George Stocker ♦ 37 secs ago
@GeorgeStocker: One can disagree with the expressed opinions: "The closure was unjust", "an explanation that does not seem to fit" — Cerbrus 17 secs ago
@Cerbrus Although disagreeing with the premise is weird here too: "We closed your question as too broad. You are asking what makes it's too broad so you can be sure not to make it too broad in the future" -> "We disagree with your premise that it was closed as too broad and you want to know how to avoid being closed as too broad in the future"? — George Stocker ♦ 1 min ago
@Cerbrus Where did the user say it was unjust? They said it was closed as too broad and the close reason doesn't fit what they understand to be too broad. I re-opened it because they're right; there's no possible way the question is too broad. They didn't say it was an unjust closing. — George Stocker ♦ 36 secs ago
Which flag did you use? The answer is certainly not a great answer but I see no reason to delete it. — BDL 23 secs ago
I think the part that gets me is that we want users to bring their problems here and become better citizens, but we downvote them into oblivion when they do that. What do we want? People to not ask us how to be good Stack Overflow citizens? For them to just' figure it out' without asking? — George Stocker ♦ 59 secs ago
@GeorgeStocker: I'm paraphrasing a little... "there's no possible way the question is too broad" That's your opinion. People clearly seem to disagree. — Cerbrus 2 mins ago
Okay, looking at the first revision of this question: Don't mention how "senior" you are, it's irrelevant. Don't state that a closure reason is a bad fit. The "Slap in the face" sentiment, while understandable, also isn't relevant. Keep the question factual, state that you don't understand the closure, and ask why. — Cerbrus 43 secs ago
You flagged it as "Not an answer". A moderator declined your flag. It is an answer, no matter how poorly formed. — George Stocker ♦ 1 min ago
We've established a (seems) exhaustive list of flagging and when to use which type of flag. it's in the "duplicate" at the top of your answer. — George Stocker ♦ 42 secs ago
@GeorgeStocker: Create a separate question for this very discussion point. It wouldn't be much value to continue/lose this thread in comments which not a lot of people are going to read. — Makoto 59 secs ago
You can dispute flags by asking on meta (which you did). The faq post was last updated in mid 2018 and the situation is the same now. — BDL 59 secs ago
"I don't think that specific section of the help center is accurate, nowadays." That discussion, George. — Cerbrus 56 secs ago
The comment thread contains comments about the meaning of votes (for users in general, for this specific question and in the help-center), new users reception on meta and how should users learn the rules. Neither of these points seem to be relevant to improvement of this question and the discussion seems to be getting out of hand. This looks like a prime target for comment clean up, and more appropriate to discuss in new Q&A, IMO. — yivi 1 min ago
@yivi I would but the new moderator menu has a bug in firefox when you click "Purge all comments". I'll have to wait until it's fixed. — George Stocker ♦ 1 min ago
5:48 PM
@rene - Thou speakest amiss. Asking for index optimaztion in Linq-to-objects is NOT too broad. How do you even come up with that? You should not discriminate against any "forgotten optimization trick" or talk about those people as going extinct as you did above (because you give yourself away). — MicroservicesOnDDD 45 secs ago
@makoto it wouldn’t be fruitful. I don’t see any push to change the help center (since it reflects how to welcome people) and I don’t think the hardcore meta people will change their habits to be more welcoming. — George Stocker ♦ 55 secs ago
@GeorgeStocker: Well...if you wouldn't mind not including it in some of the discussions around questions here - even as a tangential point - it'd be appreciated. It'd keep the comment threads a bit cleaner, at least. — Makoto 42 secs ago
So, the problem isn't the assertions in the OP, it's that meta isn't welcoming enough? What do you expect us to do? Not vote on something we disagree with? — Cerbrus 36 secs ago
@SergioPulgarin Wouldn't it be great if there were a way to filter out hiring manager who were communicating poorly? Sounds like an example of that to me. — jpaugh 29 secs ago
6:34 PM
Can add time working in open-source or personal project. Can also relate this time track with the developer experience. — Joao Vitorino 1 min ago
6:48 PM
@jpaugh What you are saying would make sense if these were few isolated cases. They are not. — Sergio Pulgarin 1 min ago
7:14 PM
OP's marking the wrong answer as a reply, doesn't make the question eligible for being closed. I believe, those who voted for close, including you didn't know and understand what the question was about at all. — Cetin Basoz 25 secs ago
Your question was OK but on SO any question can be closed for no good reason. Those who voted there, likely didn't even know what Rushmore is at all. — Cetin Basoz 48 secs ago
7:32 PM
You should be able to comment on your own questions regardless of reputation, I'm confused as to why you seemingly can't. FWIW: a) putting comments in questions/answers is frowned upon, especially if it is skirting rep restrictions; b) calling out specific users on Meta is frowned upon; c) rolling back other people's edits is probably going to end in a moderator locking the question; d) I don't see anything in that linked post about where that user says they know what Rushmore is. — F1Krazy 55 secs ago
@F1Krazy it was edited out once such claims were also removed from the question. — Kevin B 11 secs ago
@HereticMonkey: There are...shall we say, "differing perceptions" of the lifecycle of a question. Some people hold that the bias of moderation is fluid and can be changed. Others hold that the bias of moderation is calcified the instant that there's some kind of negatively-interpreted moderation on their content. It's a mix of both in some cases; some people believe that moderation is bad/unfriendly/unwelcoming/un-whatever, and they rail against it. I'm making an observation that there are some people who will take this experience to heart and hold that bias against us forever. — Makoto 1 min ago
Generally...continuing to attack those that disagree with you won't win you any friends. Especially when it is ultimately misguided. Focus on the argument, not on the people making it. — fbueckert 46 secs ago
@Lewis it's not a software library. LINQ is a built-in for C#; he's asking if they used a certain technique to make their indexing fast. He's not asking for a library. — George Stocker ♦ 11 secs ago
Yeah the fact a question is about a particular architecture's assembly language is probably enough detail. Additionally, if it's really relevant,
stack
combined with x86
is enough. — Omnifarious 33 secs ago@Lewis That's where I think the users went wrong. If you're familiar with memoization; it'd be akin to asking if Redis uses memoization in order to speed up lookups. It's not a library they're looking for, they're asking whether a particular pattern was used in the construction of LINQ. — George Stocker ♦ 2 mins ago
It really does strike me as too broad, primarily because we don't know what's really going on and therefore what the real solution to your actual problems is. The answer given by the MS guy (assuming he isn't lying) can be catastrophic if, for example, you're querying against a sql server database with 1m records. Calling ToDictionary on the context will rehydrate all your records. No Bueno. Knowing what you're attempting to do would go a long way to getting you actual answers to your practical question. That's the goal of the website. — Will 6 secs ago
So, "in time" to save the first impression? Fair enough. I guess I figured when they added the "on hold" status, that was meant to signal that it was temporary; that a user could still edit the question into shape and get it reopened. — Heretic Monkey 51 secs ago
I feel like this question misses the forest for the trees. User comes in with an outdated concept from over a decade ago, and wants to know if a modern language provides the same functionality, without actually determining if that concept is even still relevant in today's environments. If it's not too broad...I dunno. It's like asking if we can still store data on cassette tapes because you last coded on a Trash-80. — fbueckert 18 secs ago
Please don’t edit personal attacks into your question, regardless of how warranted you feel they are. I’d like to keep this question open as it’s a good question, but when you edit personal attacks into it we are either forced to edit them out or close the question. — George Stocker ♦ 1 min ago
Do you mean doing that within a Stack Overflow post, or in general? (If you mean the latter, this question is off-topic here on Meta.) — duplode 7 secs ago
I would assume OP means in a post on Main, but I agree it would be good for them to clarify for certain. — TylerH 55 secs ago
@mexitaw Nope, it's not a programming question. It's a licencing question and as such is off-topic there too. — Robert Longson 44 secs ago
9:06 PM
@GeorgeStocker Oh, of course. I should've known that. After all, I did raise the flag. Sorry. — JL2210 39 secs ago
9:46 PM
@fbueckert many of the best practices we use for data are from the 70s. Not so sure we can call a decade ago “outdated” — George Stocker ♦ 1 min ago
10:48 PM
I think you've hit your head against the glass ceiling on this one. I do largely agree with you on this question, since there's a lot of ambiguity on this. I don't think you're going to be satisfied with any response you get on this, since not everyone is as well-versed in Python as you are, nor does the average close-voter understand the subtleties and nuances of the actual problems. The real problem then becomes one of turning what is effectively an n-dimensional problem into a troubleshooting exercise and solving that. — Makoto 1 min ago
"What do we do" isn't the question that should be asked, is what I'm thinking. "How do we fix this" isn't a good question either since that implies that this is a problem. I think you're seeking an actual direction and objective of the site, such that a question like the one you're presenting can be answered without the angst you're describing. — Makoto 27 secs ago
My very strongly held opinion on this - we already don't support people who can't debug their code, but it's a blurry line on people who can't understand the code they're writing. The system itself is collapsing into itself because both camps would be right on a question like this; it's doing everything we're asking of it, yet there's enough complexity in it that the easy answers are simply incorrect. — Makoto 1 min ago
If you get an answer to that before I do, I'll buy you a beverage of your choosing. I wouldn't hold my breath, though. — Makoto 1 min ago
@Makoto I'm really just looking for some clarity on what the company expects us to do with this type of situation. What direction does SO think the site needs to be going with it? That's part of the reason I built my question on a specific example. It helps ground the issue in actions. — jpmc26 1 min ago
@JoshCaswell I agree it's relevant, but it has a noteworthy difference. In this case, the asker is basically using all the appropriate technology for their problem; they just don't have a solid enough grasp of how that technology works to recognize that a change to recognize the slight change that's necessary. Educating them on how you arrive at that slight change is a massive (in terms of writing a single answer) undertaking, though. — jpmc26 1 min ago
Not really an answer, but anyway: I don't think the expectations for answers have changed -- focus on answering the question as asked, slip in relevant extra advice if you can, stop before you find yourself writing a tutorial -- and I can't recall any statements from staff about such a change having taken place. — duplode 1 min ago
Off the cuff; it seems like the undercurrent of the question is “why don’t we have a minimal understanding closing reason”, which has been discussed to death — including posts by Shog et. Al. — George Stocker ♦ 26 secs ago
Any answer I would give would point to those questions; but in short: go as shallow or as deep as you feel you need to to answer the users’s question. — George Stocker ♦ 1 min ago
@GeorgeStocker The ones by Shog I can find about "minimal understanding" don't address this type of situation where the broadness comes from the range of underlying topics rather than a problem statement that fails to narrow the issue down. If you have a specific post in mind, a link may be helpful. — jpmc26 38 secs ago
"It's that we're not effectively educating new users about how the site works. Nobody expects a football player or basketball player to score their first goal or touchdown without knowing the rules of the game or practicing some fundamentals..." You can't expect them to do that even with education. They have to practice first. This is why I don't see education as a solution; it won't help without practicing and getting evaluated on whether you still need to improve. — jpmc26 9 secs ago
"The goal of creating the library has long been accomplished." "But to reach that, we need new generations to keep bringing the problems they encounter as they do their work to us." These two statements appear to me to be contradictory. If we already have most of the knowledge we need, then why do we need tons and tons of additions to consider? To go with the mining analogy, wouldn't it make more sense to target the veins of remaining knowledge we don't have, rather than to continue to dig where we've already pulled out most of the valuables? — jpmc26 55 secs ago
"And, we simply can't put employees in a position where they endure 100% of the accountability with only a little influence on decisions that get made." I don't understand. SO has always had full power over decisions of what gets changed. I don't think anyone on Meta is upset by any particular change being made. It's mostly the shift in values used to justify those changes, and the new values do not appear to be compatible with the old ones. — jpmc26 46 secs ago
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