From a comment: " I think the biggest failure is the fact, a reopen vote, does not push a question back into the reopen queue" Is that true? If I vote to reopen, it goes into the reopen queue, no?
in isolation it looks rather innocuous, but it was a self-answer to a question asking for a very specific off-site resource so I would not contest this conclusion
I guess it's enough for there to be a spam flag when it's closed for the flag to be accepted though?
i.e. if a mod deletes a post which has a spam flag, that flag gets automatically approved, even if the mod didn't agree that the post was spam, IIRC
@Adriaan As far as I know, a reopen-vote is intended/expected to put the post in the reopen queue, unless it's already in the queue. There's a delay until the task which moves things in/out of queues runs. How frequently that runs depends on the site; 5–30 minutes, IIRC.
There are probably a few conditions under which a reopen-vote won't put the question in the reopen queue, but I'm not sure what those are. I do know there are some rare times when a close-vote doesn't put the question in the CV queue, so I assume there are some corner cases for reopen-votes too.
The tag downloadfile (272 questions, no tag wiki) does not indicate the contents of the questions, and in most cases the download tag should suffice.
1. Does it describe the contents of the questions to which it is applied? Is it unambiguous?
No, it is used either as a substitute for [download]...
@Scratte If you're not aware, there is also a direct "invite a person to a room" feature in chat. There's at least three places where you can access it. The first two are in the popup when you click on the user in a chat room (either to the left of a message of theirs or their icon in the present users display). The popup has a "invite this user…" selection, which when clicked will expand to list the rooms you are currently in. There's also a "start a new room with this user" selection.
The third is on the chat profile profile page for the user. There's a "invite this user to" button with a pull-down list of the rooms you are currently in, and a "start a new room with this user" button. Any of these will ping-notify the user, if they have a tab open to chat. If they don't join the room or dismiss the notification within the period they've set in their chat preferences, then they will get a notification in their global inbox.
If the user doesn't have a chat user associated with their account, then you'll need to leave a comment. If there isn't a post you're already interacting with them on, then my preference is to pick an old post of theirs on which nobody else has commented (if no such is available, then a post with comments from more than one user, because if there's only one user with comments on a post, that user is also notified of any new comment).
Obviously, once the comment is no longer relevant (i.e. they respond), you should delete it, as it will be no longer needed.
Pretty sure that there are lot of duplicates also for those options. Not looked around too much, The question is so low that I have just pointed to the first one.
I saw that the [ironhack] tag was recently created and had a wiki excerpt suggestion as "Use this tag when you are a student enrolled into Ironhack's web-dev curriculum and you have a technical question related to it." Am I correct in that this tag should not exist? It doesn't seem to have an API and it is a pogramming bootcamp.
It's in "Settings" and "Date & Time". If you have both "Set time automatically" and "Set time zone automatically" selected, Windows will automatically adjust for DST.
@AdrianMole Unrelated warning: If you ever dual-boot Linux don't trust Windows to set your timezone unless you like having your clock be an hour off at all times.
Well, it's not exactly consistent. If I remember correctly (which I'm not sure I do) it's only an hour off if you boot into Windows and then boot into Linux. If you boot into Linux, shut down, and then boot into Linux again, it's fixed until you boot into Windows.