well, Joel is jewish so he knows the topic space.. I don't at all. that's the risk when we get into topic spaces we know NOTHING about, how do we tell what's mergeable and what isn't?
we can ask the proposal owners and the commiters / followers but they are often biased
eg, unix vs. ubuntu.. everyone "needs" their own site.
because "everyone" is "special" :)
anyway Area 51 merging is something we're getting heavily into, but it takes hands-on work with actual human beings to figure out
omg the list of problems with that domain name is epic. a) excludes dads, massive faux pas b) is that "for" or 4? c) is it mom4moms? moms4mom? mom4mom?
@MichaelMrozek, well, the problem was not that the choice was bad, it's just the nature of the site evolved after the event. Which points back to the elevator pitch thing, which is the right question, with that I agree.
@JeffAtwood, Yeah, you're right. That's a site for which parenting.se.com would probably be the best url (except for the 'let me spell that for you' problem)
@VinkoVrsalovic, they are magic in that it is the key question to find out if you actually know what your site is about or not. Can't answer = no focus = doomed site (in my opinion)
@Benjol My point was that you can't always have a good elevator pitch for everything. There will be some sites where answering is not possible to do in a satisfactory manner
@AidenBell Too bad there's no badges that encourage bad behaviour. Getting fifteen different people to vote to close your question is pretty impressive, I think it's gold badge worthy.
I've noticed that throughout the Internet, within forums and blog posts, Unix always has a * in the word, whether it is *nix or Un*x, as I noticed at the welcoming banner at the Unix StackExchange site.
Why is this like this?
From reading the faq @JeffAtwood this interface is rather full of goodness. Have you seen the moderation collaborative smackdown style work well already?
"This site is collectively moderated by the community through participatory flagging. If your chat messages are repeatedly being flagged by your peers you might find yourself muted, banned, or – in extreme cases – your Stack Overflow reputation may be negatively affected."
@badp So what does the blue number mean to me here then? That I flagged a message? Or that one of my messages are flagged? And why show it to me? Can I do something about it? See which message it is?