@KenWhite Np. I just didn't want to move the wrong thing. I considered it quite likely that was the one you wanted moved, but the other possibility was that there was supposed to be a link in your message that didn't end up being there.
I'm writing an article (currently 413 questions) about tag burnination.
1. Does it describe the contents of the questions to which it is applied? and is it unambiguous?
No, the questions sharing the tag are not related in any way that would matter to someone claiming to be an expert in "article...
@rene yeah it is "deployment to and management of third-party provided information technology platforms" (on-topic) but it's a bit too close to "working with a service provider's management interface, such as cPanel" (off-topic) to actually recommend
@rene my impression of that question is that it mostly refers to questions around policy and the process of submitting to an app store (many of which I've voted off-topic) which are clearly off-topic on any conceivable site because they're unanswerable, whereas in this case it's much more "how do I use this tool to administrate my company's mobile devices?" It's clearly off-topic on SO because it's not a programming question, but I was wondering if there's any place it would not be.
It's probably off-topic on Android.SE: "Issues with the Google Play Store (or any other app marketplace) from the point of view of a developer or publisher" though you could argue that it's from the point of view of an IT administrator: they're not really "publishing" apps in the normal sense.
Wait, why did SmokeDetector just bring a post to our attention that was last posted on Dec 12, 2019, and hadn't been edited until Ryan did so after seeing the SD report?
@CodyGray Why not? Wouldn't it be false to assume that old content is fine? The added answer puts the Question on the active list, so noticing if something is wrong kind of makes sense.
if there is a consensus among room owners that old posts should not be reported here, I suppose that could be accommodated with a fairly limited amount of effort
I agree that the behavior is sometimes confusing and/or annoying; over in Charcoal we probably have a higher tolerance for putting up with fuzzy but marginal behaviors
Not an RO but wouldn't it make sense to at least not report...yeah, what Cody said, a post that has already received two fp reports with no intervening edits (especially given that the report is for exactly the same problem that already got the fp)
I suspect it comes up fairly rarely since I think we tend to fix the reasons for the false positive anyway, since they are usually something that could use improvement even when not actually spam
@RyanM We exempt smokey from the "recent activity" rule. That rule only applies to cv-pls anyway so Smokey reports weren't subject to it in the first place.
@rene was that intended for someone other than me? I only mentioned the fact that it was already reported and declared a false positive for that exact same reason
@rene I actually didn't see it as Smokey being exempt from the rule. The way I saw it was 1: A new answer is added to a post. That makes the post recent. Now it can be closed in this room. This is no different from 2: A new answer is added to a post. That makes the post recent. Now smokey will see if the thread is okey-dokey.
@RyanM my pet peeve is "Try this (..)" Why should I "try this", grrr. Another one is "Hope this helps" of course you hope it helps, otherwise you shouldn't have posted :@
I once mentioned this to a fairly new user, who subsequently replied, linking to several answers with >50 score which are code only saying that that's what he based his style on and I should thus shut up
@Adriaan I've gotten this (usually without the direct suggestion that I shut up) with questions sometimes, but at least those are easy to close when they're used as bad examples.
explaining "well, people are bad at not upvoting terrible content" seems...less compelling :D
recent fascinating example - it's not terrible (it's a dupe) but the whole thing is an upvote-fest for no apparent reason
@VLAZ if you want actual research, because you've all got me researching waffle makers because I don't own one and you've made me want waffles... "Flip models take up a lot more space and didn’t yield better results in our tests." - Wirecutter
@RyanM now I feel like I need to get a waffle maker myself...damn it. I may as well go buy one at some point. I need another electrical appliance anyway - a beard trimmer. Both should be in the same store.
I just have to remember which to use where in the mornings...
@halfer fortunately SE is not dumb enough to actually give them PageRank
so really they're just catering to the market of people who want to configure HSTS in Apache and also want to take a tour of another country during a pandemic
@RyanM You can ask it in either location. You can also ask them on Webmasters.SE
If you have a deep configuration problem, however, I would highly suggest SF. I ran into a problem with nginx last year and got the help I needed on SF (had misconfigured the nginx user)
mostly htaccess is just a giant regex with a few configuration directives. As Apache HTTPD is a programming tool, it's on-topic
there are programming questions and borderline questions like what regex to use for rewrites but "what do I put in my configuration file" is not a programming question by any stretch of the imagination IMHO
@tripleee At least most programs have a source of truth for their flavor of regex, so it's more or less defined how a specific regex string would behave
BTW, someone asking how to write regex rewrites for me is a regex apache-flavored question, not an apache question.
@Braiam That's quite the straw-man argument. My point is that we have lots of apparently on-topic questions in the tag. A blanket "Apache HTTPD is off-topic" is not feasible
A more pointed counter-argument would be "there are also 141k questions with the [windows] tag on the site, that doesn't make all questions about Windows on topic"
@Braiam followed shortly by "If your question is about: managing the hardware or software of servers, workstations, storage or networks...and is not about: consumer workstations or networking...then you’re in the right place to ask your question!"
A larger issue is that the answer to a major question about what is on-topic on SO is located in a comment thread on an answer to a question with -14 score.
@SotiriosDelimanolis Just a heads up is all. Remember to read the Room disclaimer. Notices about Meta are not meant to indicate the quality of or an endorsement of Meta. Discontinue use if questions persist after 4 hours.
@Georgy it is borderline. I think the Windows Installer API has features to solve that, and that makes it a programming problem. But you might easy run into a smart solution to this problem on Super User.
@E_net4likeswaffles So, what's going on? Is that fact that it's not really an answer (as in the comment to it) part of the 'sense of humour'? But the real joke is that it has a score of +23.
@DontKnowMuchButGettingBetter If you start a message in here with "sd" (or "SD") it is interpreted as a command to Smoke Detector. If you just mean to refer to one of the reports, use "Smokey," or some such.
@Scratte Yes. But I don't think it was meant in an offensive sense: "This looks like high-level sh*t..." (or some such). So I polished that turd into some "stuff," then flagged as NAA. And then Big Bhargav deleted it.