I decline an absurd number of custom "link is broken"-type flags with the reason "does not need moderator intervention; you should have edited instead", and then I just go add an archive.org link.
I don't know why this resource seems to be so unknown to so many people.
OK, so the explanation of "Winter Bash" is that during that time which is about 3 weeks or so in length, you'll get another feature in your profile. Hats. You can pick one that you put on top of your avatar and everyone will se you with that hat you picked. You can pick a new one at any time you want. The entire site is full of users wearing silly hats :)
Some of the hats you will know what to do to get, and some will be secret. So you'll get a hat, but you will not know what you did to get it. It will just appears as one of the options you can pick.
The use of "shall" and "will" confuses even most native English speakers. Generally, for 1st person ("I" or "we") you use "shall"; 2nd and 3rd person ("you", "he", "she", "they") you use "will". Unless you are being forceful/imperative; in which case, the usage is reversed.
At school, we had a teacher who liked quoting the case of a man, who couldn't swim, falling into a river. He shouted, "I will drown and nobody shall save me!" So nobody did.
The Land of Nod (Hebrew: אֶרֶץ־נוֹד – ʾereṣ-Nōḏ) is a place mentioned in the Book of Genesis of the Hebrew Bible, located "on the east of Eden" (qiḏmaṯ-ʿḖḏen), where Cain was exiled by God after Cain had murdered his brother Abel. According to Genesis 4:16:
And Cain went out from the presence of the LORD, and dwelt in the land of Nod, on the east of Eden.וַיֵּ֥צֵא קַ֖יִן מִלִּפְנֵ֣י יְהוָ֑ה וַיֵּ֥שֶׁב בְּאֶֽרֶץ־נֹ֖וד קִדְמַת־עֵֽדֶן׃
Genesis 4:17 relates that after arriving in the Land of Nod, Cain's wife bore him a son, Enoch, in whose name he built the first city.
== Name ==
"Nod" (נוד) is...
land of Nod by The Free Dictionary "The state of sleep; the figurative realm one goes to when sleeping. The phrase is likely an allusion to how one's head nods when one is falling asleep."
lol!.. not to most commuters, it's not. You can get two more hours of real life in a day, if you spend your commuting time sleeping. 1 hour in the train into work, 1 hour in on the train back. 5 hours at night.. :)
Almost all companies in my country that went with "working from home" during the pandemic, did it because they needed to. Now that it's over, a lot of them have a forced "3-4 days a week in the office" policy.
The thing about working from home is fine, but they want people to engage in meetings and have face-to-face contact. Which saves us for the most part. Because if they didn't want that, then why hire expensive local people? They can get people to "work from home" for almost free from other places.
I can't remember I used those. I pretty much wrote paragraphs for the most part. But I used a lot of math symbols. And I find Word to be a right pain with that.
We actually do have internal tooling for creating Markdown documentation...but it's not really designed around the case of sending a doc out for review.
Google Docs is a browser-based word processor with collaborative editing and commenting, like Microsoft Word (I assume the online version can do the collaborative stuff).
I kind of generally don't overwrite stuff. I'll write what I want to change in the paragraph under and see if it's an improvement. Then I'll delete the old paragraph. If I'm sharing the document with others, I'd like to control when it's being saved, so I don't risk "Because #¤%"&! doesn't get it!" becoming part of the document :D Or more realistically FIXME! Do this..
It's not that I mind using services, but I find that one spends a really long time figuring out how they work. Like GitHub. Did you know that you have to hack it by modifying the URL on a pull-request if you want to put a comment on of the commits? And that if you just make a comment on a "review" you're not allowed to delete your own comment?
That's the stuff that makes me not want to use the services, because it takes more energy to use them, then to just pull out my nodepad++ and write in there.
@Scratte I've definitely deleted my own comments, although maybe it was on an issue...
Accidentally commented with the wrong account :-)
(I have two GitHub accounts, one that uses a pseudonym because it's primarily for interacting with Charcoal things where I don't want trolls or spammers tracking me down quite as easily, and then another with my real name)
@RyanM Yes. I've done so too. But I can't remember the circumstance now. But I did make one comment, that I'm not allowed to delete. And now I'm paranoid about it, so I'm not commenting on anything at GitHub. If I want to comment, I'll need to check the docs first.. and now we're into time consuming territory.
fiddlings pull request go and search for "(deleted)". I'm allowed to edit it, but not delete it.. @¤#%"!!!
Notice the missing commit hash on the comment.. That's because it's a comment on the pull-request itself and not on a commit.
In order to comment on a commit, you have to modify the URL. There's no button for it.
@AdrianMole What's confusing there is that "shall", "will", "must", etc. are often used in legal/technical contexts (e.g., requirements documents, contracts, etc.) to mean very specific things that standard English grammar and definitions do not use them to mean. Modern American English virtually never uses "shall". I am not sure if British English is different.
@AdrianMole Modern American English would not say this "correctly". (Although the "wrong" form—i.e., "I will drown"—is still "wrong".) At best, you'd hear: "I am going to drown..." You're never going to hear "shall".
@AdrianMole Did you not see: "Historically, prescriptive grammar stated that, when expressing pure futurity (without any additional meaning such as desire or command), shall was to be used when the subject was in the first person, and will in other cases (e.g., "On Sunday, we shall go to church, and the preacher will read the Bible.") This rule is no longer commonly adhered to by any group of English speakers, and will has essentially replaced shall in nearly all contexts." ?
@RyanM Markdown to RTF? I've used Doxygen, at least, to write documentation (outside of a source code context), and then converted to RTF, which can be opened in Word.
Unfortunately, Doxygen's RTF generation is not very good, so there was a fair amount of manual clean-up afterwards.
I agree with you heartily on this, though. Word is not the right place for technical docs. Markdown is so much better. And easier to check into source code, easier to collaborate on, universally editable, and yet easier, produces a prettier result, ...
I don't think I have ever pulled the trigger on a chat ban. Although I suppose I've validated multiple flags that kicked users from a room for 30 minutes. But that's hardly a "ban".
It was ... umm, interesting ... to see Catija (whose chat profile says "I don't bite") bite, the other day. Multi-room spammer; banned for 2 hours. She just happened to be in SOCVR at the time, and they chose that as one of their target rooms. Oops.
From my limited experience with her, she is kind and nice. She's also an excellent member of the Stack Overflow staff. I was just both surprised (and really impressed) how quickly she handled that chat-spammer. (Before I could even get round to responding to all the flags that popped up, she'd acted!)
Me either.. it's not a "The company has a right to do it. Just stop harassing theses poor millionaires. They're doing what's best for all of us. You just can't see it yet."
@RyanM It picked up mine. I read that blog post excerpt in the question carefully, even the emphasized sentence, and I didn't see anything objectionable about it, really.
@RyanM oh, actually I have one the other day, too, for the other cardinal sin of defending an answer that is merely mediocre, and was in any case an awful audit (as validated by the moderator who handled my flag on it)
@RyanM Yes, but as someone once said on meta, they probably have a small archive of ready made Answers and just keep posting whichever fits the post ;)
@manro I'm not in the business of requesting upvotes. If you agree with me, you're welcome to upvote me, but I'm in no need of upvotes, nor would I want someone to upvote me for any other reason.
@manro Please be very aware of not (habitually) upvoting those you 'like' in chat-rooms. There's almost certainly some form of system in place to detect (and reverse/punish) such voting patterns.
@Scratte Yeah. I just gotta stop doing all the chatting, review queues, and tangential data analysis on the ballot data. Really focus on answering questions... It's not really my thing. I like an interesting question and keeping my skills sharp. The reputation just sorta happened.
@CodyGray Still working things out. I have the preliminary data processed. It's just a pain to get it into a nice looking visual output. I made some decision trees which are rather interesting but I can't get the dang spacing the way I want it.
@manro It's better to vote on post when you come across them naturally. Don't check out profile and vote on stuff from them. It's kind of a bad idea.. even if the system doesn't find out today, it can still find out next month. There's not really a time when it's too late to reverse the votes.
A Meta post would definitely work to share the results of this specific election. I would very much endorse that.
But I was going a bit further and talking about something a bit more generic (i.e., not specifically focused on this election) that would be an addition to SO's general knowledge base, and garner you rep for something you like to do anyway.
Self-answered Q&A are a criminally under-utilized feature.
Like I said, I have a fair amount of the aggregation done. Still working on the outputs. I probably won't have time to really work on the graphics until this weekend.
@zcoop98: This "excitement" you speak of is so far out of touch with those of us who've given feedback on it, that it honestly is negative. It's like our concerns or our questions or our opinions on it simply don't matter. And honestly, if they don't matter, I could live with that too. I just want them to be honest and up-front about it and own that. — Makoto59 mins ago
@manro No. Even moderators cannot see who voted. However, moderators can see vote patterns. So, say, if you had voted a dozen times for Adrian Mole's posts, I would be able to see that suspicious voting pattern.
Not which specific posts you voted on, but the fact that you'd voten dozens of times for posts by the same person.
@Scratte Yeah. Especially because I already got griped at once today for something that I didn't even intend to be snarky. (And, trust me, I know when I intend to be snarky.)
@manro We look at a lot of things to determine if the pattern might be justifiable. Say, for example, that Adrian and I work in the same technologies and answer a lot of the same types of questions. At that point, the "overlap" in voting seems a lot more reasonable. But Scratte and I work in very different technologies, yet are friends in chat, so if I have a bunch of votes for him, that's super suspicious.
And then there are other things we look at, which I cannot go into, because that would allow people to start using that knowledge to "game the system".
@Scratte Hmm. Just because people vote differently to you, that doesn't make them wrong. I'm not saying they're not wrong, just that none of knows why anyone else voted the way they did.
Anyway, you should not vote for someone's posts because you love that person. Votes should be on the content of posts. So, only vote for a post that was actually useful to you in some way, that actually helped you.
Any time you sit down with a person's profile, go through it, and vote on their posts, you're doing it wrong.
@AdrianMole Sure, we do: Candidate score. Please pay more attention next time when reviewing.
@AdrianMole I understand your argument.. but in this case, I think they were wrong. I think they did not inform themselves. I think lots of people just did it for the silver badge.
@AdrianMole Last time, they had votes on a questionnaire on meta.. which is another quick pointer pointer, if you just want the silver badge.
@Scratte Sure. But it's gonna be a major task to significantly improve the system. Should we have 'weighted' votes? (I.e. mods get max weight, others have their votes weighted according to ... what? Reputation? Curation activity? Chat post count?)
We're drifting into dodgy territory, here. My top candidate did not get elected, and I am disappointed by that. But: (a) That's what can happen in democratic systems! (b) Maybe we should give those who were elected a chance to show their mettle!!
I made a fairly harsh public criticism of one candidate; but I'm now fully supporting that new moderator's position, in any way I can. I both hope and expect my doubts to be proved ill-founded, and I will be very happy when they are.
@RyanM Agreed. Also, what a lot of people miss is that a lot of the existing mods aren't very active, so their not showing up on Meta is not something special. it's just a consequence of the fact that they aren't actively moderating.
@Scratte That could be interesting, although the visualization currently shows the process of the election. I'd like to be able to visualize the correlation between people's relative choices. But again, I only really had enough time to pull together all the aggregations (that's something I'm pretty good at) the visualization is something I'm going to have to spend some time on.