@leonheess If you think the question should be closed for one of the reasons listed in the close reason dialog, then yes, you should flag it as needing to be closed for that reason. If you can't find a reason that fits, then it should not be closed, and you should simply downvote on the basis that it does not show sufficient research effort (by your standards).
@AndrasDeak The scene opens on Meta Stack Overflow. An angry user has posted a rant in the form of a question, complaining that all of their questions on the main site keep getting downvoted. They insist that all downvoters need to give a reason. A moderator investigates the situation, and determines that they are correct: every single time they create a new sockpuppet account to re-ask that question, it continues to get downvotes.
And you guys think the Meta effect is bad when it results in a couple of downvotes. Imagine when it results in a moderator deleting all of your sockpuppet accounts and suspending your main account.
@AdrianMole There is no path for that, as far as I'm aware. New answers to old posts always end up in the "Late Answers" review queue, posts that are automatically flagged as being low quality (due to length, poor grammar, etc.) get put into a review queue, and a user's very first post always ends up in "First Posts". But aside from that, unless someone raises a flag, downvotes alone aren't enough to put a post into review.
It isn't a crazy way of thinking, really. Other than the fact that not all of our audience is quality-minded and they don't always use the curation tools provided to them.
iirc one of my first failed audits was one of these "It's a duplicate answer but it isn't really" ones people have been complaining about recently... and I tried to flag one of Skeet's answers... (although i could be talking trash, we're talking years ago now)
@Scratte I've had review in queues where I've 'been involved' - albeit, in an 'innocuous' way. (Like re-open on Qs I've close-voted, and/or where I've edited.)
@NickA I recently came across a "First Posts" audit (and obviously an audit - username was fuzzed-out, and I 'recognised the style) .. it was an answer from the aforementioned Mr Skeet. Made me laugh for a good few hours, actually, thinking about anyone who failed that test.
Genrally, I "Skip" if nothing has changed. If the "edit" has improved the post, then I'd give a "re-open" vote.
Tbf, (regarding the jon skeet answer dupe flag), if you don't realise that the answer you're looking for doesn't appear twice in the answer list and you don't know to look out for it, it's easy enough to trip on, I understand why there's as many recent complaints about those types of audits as there are
@Scratte The review-queue system (however 'broken' it may be) doesn't present "own posts" to the reviewer. However, I have come across posts that I have posted an answer to (close-vote and/or re-open). In such cases, I "Skip" on principle.
I'm not arguing with your point-of-view, just clarifying my own.
I may even think, on reflection, and after posting an answer, that a Q should be closed - but that action could (rightly) raise some concerns that I'm 'gaming' to prevent others from answering, for example. So I skip.
@Scratte You can find the criteria for the Roomba here. If you're interested, I wrote a userscript, Roomba Forecaster which will tell you the status of a question wrt. the Roomba tasks.
@Dharman Yeah, that happens: you flag an answer as "NAA" and then, half an hour later, you see it in the LQP queue. (Gives you the chance to change your mind?)
@Scratte Thanks. The user guide needs an update. :-) The data is now horizontal just under the question title, rather than where it used to be in the sidebar. :-;
@sideshowbarker If there is a u which is either the only thing in the Markdown or separated from other things by a space character or the start/end of the string, then it won't substitute. The "escape" would be to use another type of Unicode space rather than an actual space character.
I don't know if it's annoying per se, @sideshowbarker, but it doesn't seem necessary. One has to click through to the question anyway in order to close it, so they can read it at that time.
@sideshowbarker As for this one, if I wanted to say anything other than just the close reason, I'd probably say something like "question is one short run-on sentence with a link". I'd consider that better than pasting that specific question into the reason field, because the descriptor is actually easier to parse than users having to read the full question text prior to clicking through. Thus, it's probably more likely for someone to click-through. Once they click through, they're quite likely to VtC.
@CodyGray How about this? It has a lot of views, a criteria to stay (as I understood from a previous discussion) and peripherally is related to programming (or its outcome?). Can it shadow the real off-topicness (I know it's not a word :)). I have voted to delete
Heh. Your automatically inserted close reason comment got flagged as "unfriendly or unkind", @Vega.
Yeah, I think that one is definitely very close to being on-topic.
@Shree They're basically the same thing. :-) Except that one is gone forever, and the other can never be gotten rid of.
Basically, for posts that we would normally want to delete, but we decide there's value in them that should be saved, that's when we use the historical lock.
So they're very similar in terms of when they would be used, even though they have opposite effects.
@DalijaPrasnikar we were only discussing if we wanted to join a strike and about its form. The strike itself is part of larger initiative that is steered outside of the scope of socvr. That party has to set a date. As they seemed to settle for the 24th, I felt we had to rush a bit to get your opinions. I'll evaluate with the RO's how this went.
so no, there is no strike yet but we gathered valuable feedback from all involved parties, including feedback from an SE developer.
@rene Thanks. FWIW, I am mostly on strike as-is... I am not sure if strike can really change anything, but it can send a message... although it is questionable if anyone is listening...
@dur I think this user is just confused about how it's suppose to work. Not sure if anyone agrees, but I'd leave a comment explaining that they should separate it into a clear question and a clear answer.
@dur If it can fit into a real question/answer here, then why not let them do it? With a nudge in a comment? :) I would expect it's always better to let the owner do the work.
@Machavity Isn't SEO about putting the search results higher in search engines? The question seems to be about improving the performance of the website.
@Dharman The Needs Details Or Clarity prescribed reason is what replaced the old "Unclear what you're asking" reason, which is the appropriate one to use for non-English language posts
@Dharman From here: "Questions written in non-English should be closed/flagged as "Needs more details or clarity," or close voters can use the following custom close reason: "I'm voting to close this question because it is not English.""
Per the room meeting yesterday, SOCVR will participate in any network strike, if one is organized. If you have questions about the broader effort, please ping Mithical
@StephenKennedy I try. When you find dirty, stinkin' socks laying on the ground, it's hard to know exactly who they belong to sometimes. I sniff around for all possible culprits, and kick the dog just to be safe.
Is it okay to ask a question without limiting it to any programming language? And second, is it okay if I share a link to one of my questions, asking for insight from you guys?
@M-- Yes, if it's a specific, practical programming question that can be answered within the limits of Stack Overflow's Q&A format. Yes, I'd say so, as long as you're not asking for someone to take any particular action on it.
@M-- Lots of algorithm questions don't depend on any language and they are on topic here. I don't mind asking for insights, as long as you are not asking us to act on it.
I was going to point to one of my recent questions about peak-detection in real-time sinusoidal data sets that is not language-specific, but I see you've already bountied it, @M--, so I guess it stands to reason that you know about it. :-)
@M-- fair enough, though typically if you are truly accepting answers in any of a half dozen languages, users ought to be able to just provide pseudo-code rather than an actual language. Otherwise it seems a bit broad.
@tink At a minimum, I'd go with "No MCVE", because there's not enough information in the question to duplicate the problem (i.e. we have to go off-site to get the code).
Not sockpuppets. I voted for that post three times using one account, carefully triggering a server error half-way through the processing of the first two votes so as to add multiple duplicate links. Hopefully, we'll have a better process for that at some point in the future. — Shog9Jan 6 '17 at 1:59
What happens to pending Spam flags when the flagged post is deleted by OP? Like this one: stackoverflow.com/a/60215635/10871073 (I have a spam flag that's still marked as "pending".)
I actually just installed it in a small business and networked it so they could have multiple machines using it. It's pretty popular with small businesses.
@Das_Geek Yeah, I’m naturally reluctant to trust the IT advice of a bank who prevents users from having strong passwords, but this time it seemed like solid advice.
Whenever I think Dell or HP from that era, I always get reminded of those crappy BTX motherboards. Whose idea was that? "Let's take a perfectly good form factor and just...flip it :D"
NetBurst was chasing astronomically high clock speeds (targeted 10 GHz; never made it more than an inch past 3 GHz), but to do so, it had to extend the pipeline significantly. NetBurst had something like 36 stages, IIRC. That was terrible for performance on apps of the day, which were compiled for shorter pipelined CPUs, so P4 was generally slower than P3.
Even once compilers appeared on the scene with NetBurst in mind, it was still hard to generate efficient code because code that does real work tends to have to branch, and branch mispredicts were hugely expensive with NetBurst
Gotta flush the pipeline and start all over, so all those GHz speed cycles go to waste anyway
Yes. The P6 has something like 12. P6 was introduced with the Pentium Pro in 95, And was refined through Pentium 2 and 3. Intel dropped it for NetBurst with P4, then dropped that as an architectural dead-end and went back to the P6 architecture for the “Core” series.
Core was based on the P3 design, not a refinement of the P4
The one good feature of the P4 microarchitecture was the trace cache, which was introduced to the P6 microarchitecture with Sandy Bridge
Pentium 4 also gave us SMT (“HyperThreading” in Intel’s marketing speak), which was also added to P6 with the “Core” chips (I forget which generation, probably Nehalem). That’s of dubious benefit, though. It was more critically needed in NetBurst where that long pipeline and frequent bubbles meant you often had a CPU’s execution units sitting idle, so why not fill it with code from another process?
Now, SMT is mostly just useful for letting the CPU’s execution engines do other work during data dependency-induced latency.
Huh, that's all really interesting. Unfortunately, one you get too far into architecture, it descends into the realms of "strange magicks" for me. But it's still cool :D
I "kinda" did solid stuff when studying interferometers and similar
The main reason I took those classes was to qualify for my research professor's class on QI, but he took the year off from teaching the first semester I was able to, then I graduated :\