@AndrewMyers By the definitions used by SO/SE, it is spam (undisclosed affiliation). It's debatable if the question asks for such recommendations. If you believe the question doesn't, then it also qualifies by being unsolicited. However, the nature of the post is one that we usually give the user the benefit of the doubt on the first occurrence. Usually, I'll leave a comment with links to the various policies regarding self promotion (done), with the hope that the user will update to comply.
I'll then revisit after a time (e.g. 2 days) and flag as spam at that time, if the post has not been updated.
Yeah. That's only enabled on Stack Overflow, I think
That's Eggs.Cthulu (sic). There should be Eggs.WOB, Eggs.MTG, etc, but they don't show up in the console
Of course, you can still copy the source code and paste it in the console...
...And it still doesn't do much because I can't trigger it. It gives me UI to turn on "wheelsound" in local storage, but the Eggs.WOB.blame function won't get called unless there's actually a Wheel of Blame thing (I think)
I wish I had 20k rights on this site - I have Trusted User status on a Beta site, but it's kind of boring because people are so well-behaved there that I hardly ever have to vote to delete
@AlonEitan Given that it has almost 30k views, deleting it doesn't seem like a good idea. It's a duplicate (now), and clearly something that people land on (i.e. it will probably be a good signpost, which is what a duplicate is supposed to be).
Well, it is now deleted. I request deletion because I was expecting more upvotes on the question/answers with so many views, so I concluded that it wasn't helpful for the majority of viewers
@AlonEitan Duplicates are signposts. They're not in any way about the question or answer scores (actually, we hope that duplicates have no answers). Duplicates are about being high in search engine results to get people to the dup-target, not the duplicate. Unless there's something wrong in the question or answer(s), or it's actually cluttering up search results, which this didn't appear to be, then there's no reason to delete, and every reason to keep it, if it's being a good signpost.
I'd say it's largely difficult to give an answer without knowing the exact circumstances (i.e. seeing the specific questions). I'd probably be somewhere between at least wanting there to be an attempt to get it closed through normal means (i.e. a close vote and seeing if the CV-queue handled it) and being OK with posting a cv-pls.
Is there a rule about the amount of cv-pls requests a person can make (in an hour/day/week) or is there only a general guidline? (I was told a while back to limit myself)
@GertArnold "How did this even pass the checks?" --> check the revision history, it wasn't all code at first (well it was but it wasn't formatted as code)
@Makyen Thanks for that info, I had overlooked that in the faq (the bold texts drew my attention to the next line) and currently reading the second link :)
@Makyen I understand it is a general (loose) guideline for not posting more than 4-5 cv-pls request in a row/short time. I'm just missing an absolute limit (like max 10 a day) also I have seen people doing maybe 10 requests in 10 min (hard to say in a row because other people also posting inbetween). Would that be to much?
ask in the room if you find yourself doing more than a few in quick succession
the quality of the posts is also a factor; if they are horrible then maybe bend the rules a bit (but on the other hand probably discuss the lode you found and whether it should be coordinated and/or discussed on meta)
if nobody is responding then you are probably not disturbing a lot of people right there and then
@Makyen And can anyone say something about it or only RO's (maybe experienced regulars). And if I can say something about it how should I do that (I really suck at being delicate/not blunt)
In such situations, I often make it more about my wanting to understand the rules, rather than trying to "enforce" the rules upon someone else. So something like "@foobar My understanding based on [link to FAQ] that we were supposed to do X/not do Y. I've noticed you doing Q. Was I misunderstanding what we were supposed to be doing in this situation?"
in practice I suppose we all do a bit of back and forth around when something exceeds a reasonable threshold ... and then often you find that when one person is irritated enough to complain, several others have already been giving it similar thoughts
I make a point of close-voting a couple whenever I have a coffee/beer. That covers me for when I see the occasional attack of multi-trash that I need to notify here.
@AlonEitan Yam doesn't actually take feedback. However, replying to GraveRobber reports lets other people know that you've checked it out and made a determination. This means that they don't need to. In addition, it means that ROs can archive that Yam report, as it's served it's purpose. Personally, when someone replies to a Yam report I add the report and reply to the list of messages to archive the next time I run the Archiver. This gets them out of the way sooner.
@MartinJames That's exactly the idea of surge protection. Problem with a generator is it will not start anything fast enough to provide seamless power to your devices. Nor is it a protection device (in fact it can create EMI problems on its own). For few second drops it's obviously also unusable. So you need some battery buffer anyway and that's where UPS come into play. Either a small one under the desk or a larger one (in terms of power, not necessarily battery capacity) for the whole house.
But without proper surge protection it's just like flushing even more devices down the drain in case of an event. Expect more problems due to thunderstorms the next few years. It's a safe bet imo.
[tag:javascript] [tag:angularjs] duplicate [angular ng-model is not working for input type=checkbox ](https://stackoverflow.com/questions/38300120/angular-ng-model-is-not-working-for-input-type-checkbox)
"I am going to ignore the terrible choice of using eval... but do read this link because I can't really ignore it at all." LOL! — Cris Luengo51 mins ago
@TylerH Yeah I saw, seems a little odd to me, but hey-ho, I would've just expected them to be nicer about it than make assumptions about where your priorities were
@techraf I agree this is "too broad", but I don't see how it's a resource request. The user does say they couldn't find other examples, but doesn't actually ask for them.