however I'm still amazed how many votes I already got... (I did not remember the counts of the last election) I don't know so much people in real life so that is cool
I really only voted for you because of your performance answering comments in the nomination phase. I didn't do too much research for all the candidates.
I actually read each nomination. If the user sounded like a good moderator, and wasn't just "I like SO!" then I upvoted, the few that were just "I like SO" I downvoted, and left the rest alone
Sure, I was referring to the concern that people will vote without reading
of course, their criteria are their own
@yellowantphil Yes.... but my determination of "bad mod" was effectively based on if they seemed engaged, knew the community, and such. Those that didn't display those usually just wrote "I love SO" (over simplification of course) and so that was my downvotes.
@Unihedro Your "balance" statement worried me, not sure you would have time to be a mod. Otherwise your nomination post was alright, but didn't say all that much about why you would make a good SO mod.
@rekire Yeah, you have to drop the whole idea that downvotes are rude, and also not let them bother you when you receive them yourself. They're actually a really important part in maintaining the overall quality of the site.
@rekire The concern in the nomination comments was more than that, too. The general concern, that I saw at least, was more along the lines of "Well, if you avoid downvotes (etc.) because you believe people are sensitive to that type of thing, are you going to be able to confidently handle other situations where you have to just lay down the law and risk offending people?" That's the really important part of the discussion that was happening.
Well, I can apparently convince Tomcat to provide websockets no problem, and JSR-356 exists, so ... blah, I need to move on to other things. This is what I get for being involved in a community of programmers.
@Mixcels Yeah, that was at some point in the last 36 hours, just after Jeremy shot up into the top 10 and bumped me out. Undo was originally ahead of Raghav and Paresh too, and dropped down, then got passed by Jeremy. Then for a really long time at some point within the last 18 hours, Undo and I stayed tied.
In the "Votes Cast" section of my profile, my vote to close this question is annotated with "(deleted)":
However, the close vote does not appear to have been deleted: it successfully closed the question:
Why was this vote marked as "(deleted)"?
If the vote was deleted my some internal pr...
So if you try to onebox a onebox from a different chat server, this weirdness happens. Basically, it generates this URL:
http://chat.stackexchange.com//stackoverflow.com/questions/25609915/php-sql-match-against
Now, obviously that isn't right. I've also tested this here, and I'm assuming it...
@TravisJ Yeah, basically node with a newer V8 engine and open governance.
import {Server} from 'ws';
let wss = new Server({port: 8081});
wss.on('connection', function connection(ws) {
ws.on('message', function incoming(message) {
console.log('received: %s', message);
});
scrape()...
@GraceNote If there were a tie for #10, what criteria determines who advances? I want to add proper handling of ties to the monitor app, but I want to make sure the red cutoff line stays accurate. The tie between me and Undo has been relentless.
meagar's answers
A question is asked and receives some very good answers. The asker then flags this question and asks for it to be deleted because having it up will cause them trouble at work or school. Do you delete the question?
I would begin by advising the user that, once they hav...
@meagar you already have an upvote forfor bothering to prepare before hand, produce a result etc... etc...
user50049
21:06
@MehdiRostami Could try adding a paragraph or two of text to your question to explain the problem in more detail, and what you think the code you posted does :)
@kurenn The nomination phase ended a couple days ago, but keep an eye out for the next election (they're roughly yearly but it varies). Stay active and participate in the mean time.
@Omar The current frontrunner to be mod has about 300 times more rep than you do. I recommend doing 300x as much as you did since you joined in the next year to have a strong chance at being mod.
I agree... once you hit a level that demonstrates you are active and understand this community. Even if the system didn't require at least 3K, I can't imagine voting for someone under that.
Is the w in cow a vowel or a consonant?
Assuming it is considered a vowel, would it likewise be so in how?
I learned that the vowels are "a, e, i, o, u, and sometimes y."
If w can be a vowel, what other letters can be vowels?
What is the definition of a vowel?
By the way, I know w can be a vow...
Possible Duplicates:
When is “Y” a vowel?
Is the 'w' in 'cow' a vowel or a consonant?
Are W and Y vowels? I learned it depends on the conditions. But I don't know what conditions.
That's so cool. Is the iojs server appropriate for larger scale applications, e.g. performance-wise under a heavy load?
Another thing that was tossed around in the tavern was writing a userscript similar to stackapps.com/questions/4548/… that ran on the elections page, and periodically queried the election page in the background to keep vote counts live in the table. Yet another thing on my want-to-do list is modify that userscript to do that.
Although I do like just being able to say to people "go to this URL" instead of requiring installation of *monkey, userscripts, etc. I'm a big fan of one-easy-step.
@JasonC alright, looks like I won't be able to set it up today
But here are the two main files in play herer
// Created by madara all rights reserved.
import Promise from 'bluebird';
import {getScores, getUsers} from './scraper';
import {Server} from 'ws';
let wss = new Server({port: 8081});
let currentScores;
setInterval(Promise.coroutine(function*() {
if (wss.clients.length === 0) {
console.log('No clients connected. Ending.');
return;
}
console.log(`${wss.clients.length} clients connected. Scraping.`);
var scores = yield getScores();
currentScores = scores;
wss.clients.forEach(ws => ws.send(JSON.stringify({s:scores})));
// Created by madara all rights reserved.
import request from 'request';
import Promise from 'bluebird';
import Cheerio from 'cheerio';
Promise.promisifyAll(request);
let url = 'http://stackoverflow.com/election/6';
let scrape = Promise.coroutine(function*() {
let [response, body] = yield request.getAsync(url);
return Cheerio.load(body);
});
let getUsers = Promise.coroutine(function*() {
let $ = yield scrape();
let $userList = $('.user-details');
return $userList.map((index, element) => {
We need multiple users all running the same voting bot. The bots can talk to each other and choose how many of them vote at the last second to force a tie.
@ShaifulIslam Hmm. I'm not sure. It does seem to promote some weird behaviour: some users will downvote all candidates except for their favourite, effectively doubling the strength of their vote.
But I haven't really given it enough thought to say.
For what it's worth, the user you linked to is paid. She's a developer at Stack Exchange, and used to be a community manager. Assuming you're talking about elected/appointed moderators, though:
Speaking for myself, I don't want to be paid. This is a fun, somewhat relaxing (sometimes terrifying...
I thought that, at least on Stack Overflow, they had only been giving t-shirts to people who make it through the primaries for at least the last several elections.
@Doorknob they only do that upon request (ie tracking down a voting ring) and they still don't release that info to the mods. They may confirm that Suspect A voted for Suspect B, but nothing more. The voting data is sacred.