Hello and welcome to the election night special! The election is in the nomination phase, and currently there are 2 candidates. I can answer commonly-asked questions about elections (type @ElectionBot help for more info).
If you want to make an informed decision on who to vote for, you should read the candidates' answers to the questionnaire, and also look at examples of their participation on Meta and how they conduct themselves.
BBC would like to announce that: The election is in the nomination phase, and currently there are 2 candidates. I can answer commonly-asked questions about elections (type @ElectionBot help for more info).
Realized I've made an off-by-one error in misstating my rank among close-vote reviewers. I shall endeavor to atone for my error by performing another 277 close reviews in order to make the comment correct, though it will then misstate the number of Steward badges I hold...
(also if any CMs or mods can and want to edit the original comment to correct the error, feel free)
Relatedly, do you know why the comments on the old election pages aren't there? Is that an artifact of the conversion to the new system, or just a deliberate removal due to the comments often containing the sort of discussion of past user behavior that's often best kept more ephemeral?
Hello and welcome to the election night special! The election is in the nomination phase, and currently there are 2 candidates. I can answer commonly-asked questions about elections (type @ElectionBot help for more info).
The bot would like to apologize for the next announcement: The election is in the nomination phase, and currently there are 2 candidates. I can answer commonly-asked questions about elections (type @ElectionBot help for more info).
e.g. "You receive one vote, which you may use to rank the candidates in order. You may choose your first choice candidate, along with possibly other candidates you wish to transfer your vote to in case your top candidate doesn't receive enough votes. If your preferred candidate wins with excess votes, a portion of your vote will be transferred to your other selected candidates."
BBC would like to announce that: The election is in the nomination phase, and currently there are 2 candidates. I can answer commonly-asked questions about elections (type @ElectionBot help for more info).
Even when it was a separate Meta post, it was pretty typical for serious candidates to submit their questionnaire answers at the same time. (At least on SO. Don't know about other sites.)
@bad_coder I'll think of a response to your question at some point. I'm not ignoring it, but it turns out it's much easier to talk about what I do than to describe myself in the space of a comment ^^;
I think this is one of the things that makes @RyanM is a good candidate for moderator: he doesn't spend all his time talking about himself. He spends his time actually doing things that help make the site a better place.
BBC would like to announce that: The election is in the nomination phase, and currently there are 2 candidates. I can answer commonly-asked questions about elections (type @ElectionBot help for more info).
I suppose it is. But I prefer to use the term, "curation" for such activities. "Moderating" is (IMHO) more about flagging, resolving disputes and exception handling.
... and teaching. Everyone forgets about teaching.
I fully understand that. But what's the point in standing at a time when you know in advance that you'll likely be "taking a break" as the first of your actions as a newly enrolled ennobled moderator?
@AdrianMole You're still an asset, even if you get a slow start. And no one knows when the next election will be. And we will all be in a much better place having you as a moderator that "only" devotes a few minutes a day here.. and I think that even if you were not a moderator you'll be spending at least an hour on the site every day :)
Here's the perfect plan: run for moderator, come in 3rd place and just narrowly avoid getting one of the proper spots, get your life in order, then get called up a few months after the election.
@Scratte You (and others) have mentioned my sense of humour (such as it is) as one of my positive traits. But over half my 'jokes' in chat are making fun of moderators. That would clearly have to stop!
And now for something completely different. The election is in the nomination phase, and currently there are 2 candidates. I can answer commonly-asked questions about elections (type @ElectionBot help for more info).
The 40-point candidate score is calculated this way: 1 point for each 1,000 reputation up to 20,000 reputation (20 points); and 1 point for each of the 8 moderation, 6 editing, and 6 participation badges (20 points)
This is how I see it. You're kind, calm, always very reasonable, you make sound decisions, you back up your claims, on the rare occasion that you make a mistake, you always own it and you correct your mistake instead of ignoring it. You've always handled yourself well and you have the respect of a lot of people already. It's an "Everyone loves Arian" sort of thing :)
Actually, it should be spelled with an initial "H" (as in the wall-building Roman emperor). But it was lost when translating from the Greek version (they have a wiggly mark over vowels, for aspiration, instead of using a separate letter).
As far as I know, in the name "Hadrian", the initial H is actually voiced, so it sounds different from "Adrian". But maybe it didn't in the original Greek. I am not sure. Classics is outside of my expertise.
I'm also a wee bit confused as to how it was lost when translating from the Greek version, yet it was the Roman emperor who had the name "Hadrian".
"Hadrian", as in the name of the Roman emperor (and the tiny offspring of Justin Trudeau) is the anglicization of the Roman form, "Hadrianus".
Look at the Greek name for Greece: Ἑλλάς. That little apostrophe-like mark aspirates the opening vowel, so it's pronounced "Hellas" rather than "Ellas".
And now for something completely different. The election is in the nomination phase, and currently there are 2 candidates. I can answer commonly-asked questions about elections (type @ElectionBot help for more info).
Yes, I assume so. The Ionic dialects are the ones which give something of themselves up to other dialects, whereas the Covalent dialects share some aspect mutually.
I literally had precisely the same thought when I read that.
@Scratte I suggest changing it to "I'm temporary Adrian's secretary". Make sure to confuse people whether Adrian is temporary or your position as a secretary.
I'll make the entire post very short "Hi, I'm Scratte. I'm temporary Adrian's ephemeral secretary. Adrian asked me not to do this, but here it is: Vote for Adrian. P.S. Adrian is awesome and if Adrian had written this, it would have been awesome too".
I understand why the answer to my previous question is: No :D
And now for something completely different. The election is in the nomination phase, and currently there are 2 candidates. I can answer commonly-asked questions about elections (type @ElectionBot help for more info).
BBC would like to announce that: The election is in the nomination phase, and currently there are 2 candidates. I can answer commonly-asked questions about elections (type @ElectionBot help for more info).
Breaking news!!! The election is in the nomination phase, and currently there are 2 candidates. I can answer commonly-asked questions about elections (type @ElectionBot help for more info).
Welcome to the election chat room! The election is in the nomination phase, and currently there are 2 candidates. I can answer commonly-asked questions about elections (type @ElectionBot help for more info).