@CodyGray Unfortunately, in our flawed world, we often end up in some weird situation where a fish really is the only tool. Hence when somebody stranded on a hammerless island tries to figure out whatever they have available, the answer of "use a hammer" is not useful to them.
I've been in this situation. Some legacy project leads to some weird and broken by design situation. So, I start seaching for how to achieve X using the wrong tool. And I find questions on SO that describe my exact situation but evidently the asker has other alternatives available. And the answer(s) only discuss the alternatives, not what the question as asked is.
And that's a huge issue with XY problems. For some the Y might be valid. And people who actually need the Y land on the question that turns out to be a lie.
@manro Your opinion/guess is not correct. The younger generations, including millennials, tend to lean left on the political spectrum, not right. That would make them primarily liberal, not conservative.
Ah, right. I only saw that it was closed as "off-topic", which is the epitome of silly. But, of course, that silly, cannot-possibly-apply reason shows up when the voters are split.
@manro My family has mixed ancestry and has lived in this country for a very long time (back to the founding of the country, in at least one case). This is our origin, as far as I'm concerned. Where my ancestors from centuries ago came from...isn't really relevant to me.
Stevvve The Adnificent has added the following six ads to the system:
These should be showing up randomly to users with 5,000+ reputation who happen to be browsing through them.
We'll check back after a bit to see if it's made any difference...
@manro you did not find it gloomy? It's honestly the first time I've seen The Godfather to be described as such. "Once upon a time in America" is also a great film in the same venue (not in the Seventh Seal venue, ofc)
last time I checked, it was a study on the nature of life and its finitude through the eyes of a person trying to win against personified Death in a chess party to wiggle out of their demise
You mentioned "religious themes" and "ordinary watchers" in the context of "worse than gloomy". So, I am really interested in you elaborating on that. As I mentioned above, to me it was a study on finitude of human life
> Windows is the most popular operating system for developers, across both personal and professional use. A Linux-based OS is more popular than macOS - speaking to the appeal of using open source software.
Is it just me, or does the first sentence blatantly contradict the second?
A majority of people prefer the color blue. There are more people who like the color red than the color green - this speaks to a general preference for warm colors over cool colors.
@OlegValteriswithUkraine Yeah, would you believe I even expected the colors in the color wheels to stay consistent when switching from "Professional Developers" to "Learning to Code"?
Also, today in rarely used moderator tricks: the elusive cross-site merge, in which we move an answer to an off-topic question onto the cross-post on the correct site.
@VLAZ Oh, good. I was going to make a joke about checking my own mirror, but decided it was too vain, so went with the starboard one instead. I'm glad someone got that in after all.
Hmm, chat applications should start implementing a "dead man network switch" functionality. Where you have a message primed and it goes out if your connection drops.
If your network connectivity is spotty, you can prepare one that says "Sorry, connection dropped" or something. And the client just sends a "keep alive" ping that prevents it from posting. If it stops for a few seconds, it will post.
It's a bit of a niche case but...it's also not THAT niche. I think every member of my team has experienced this at least once. And we all have pretty good connections normally.
I find that the status is often misleading. It doesn't update fast enough. Also, it's not as visible. MS Teams, for example, would claim you're still in the call for a couple of minutes, even if you're not. And would show your status as "busy"/"in a call". And it takes about 5 minutes of inactivity to change the status.
In general chat apps are trying to be quite optimistic for your availability. Whereas I want 1. To have a way to notify of non-availability immediately. 2. This to be more explicit
Both of these are flipping the current common model around.
Ah, well, yes, that's an intentional design feature.
They're intentionally de-bouncing the status update.
It would be easier to just fix/change that.
And while posting an "I'm not here" message to the transcript would certainly increase visibility, I'm not sure it's necessary in an inherently asynchronous model that doesn't require any particular person to be there at any particular time.
eh, do U/U flags also follow the "seven dirty words" rule? I just mislicked an NLN on yet another "please upvote my answer" and got it insta-marked as helpful
All that helpful abusive/unfriendly comment flags do is alert moderators if it happens to enough of a user's comments in a short enough period of time.
Alerting moderators that you suck at flagging is generally not a beneficial strategy.
We also incorrectly mark abusive/unfriendly comment flags helpful all the time if the comment was also correctly flagged as NLN.
Because it's either that or decline the correct flag.
Thus, sometimes we get the "possible comment abuse" flag and go "meh"
but if it were like, 5 thanks comments, we might go "hmmmm" and take a look at how that happened.
one benefit to this broken system is that it means limiting the number of rude comments you post won't necessarily result in staying off that autoflag's radar...
although if it's especially rude and we see it, we won't necessarily wait for the flag, either.
Hmmm, my plan to use a flag to remind myself which account needed more plagiarism-hunting was a little half-baked...
In fairness, they'd only been a mod a handful of months longer than I have.
Speaking of misclicks, one day it's going to backfire that one of my userscripts has the button for "instantly red-flag nuke the post" a couple dozen pixels or so from the button for "everything's fine, nothing to see here"
(that wouldn't be a problem, since it's like, 2-3 more clicks to undo that. just maybe briefly confusing for anyone who sees it.)
@RyanM heh, well, when you get the "you can't open the flag dialog" bs for the 15th time in a row, one tends to start mashing enter until the submit goes through :) Network sites just don't have anywhere near as much posts/comments to flag as we do