Questions asking us to recommend or find a book, tool, software library, tutorial or other off-site resource are off-topic for Stack Overflow as they tend to attract opinionated answers and spam. — Prerak Sola22 secs ago
Where would be a better place to ask this? I want to understand the programmers process to learning this seemed like a good place. — Foo Fighter21 secs ago
@ThomasOwens we've been hit in software-developer tag again and I've got a theory, maybe system suggests it based on high viewed historical questions. Would you be interested to help me test that by wiping it out from tags in these questions? Can't do it myself because of historical lock
...in case if you will one question there is bit tricky having it as the only tag but as far as I could tell in there it could be replaced with organization or team tag
I can take a look later this weekend or next week. It's a holiday so I'm not near a computer as much. I'm mobile now. Please poke me on Monday to remind me.
Questions asking us to recommend or find a book, tool, software library, tutorial or other off-site resource are off-topic for Stack Overflow — Selvin43 secs ago
Questions asking us to suggest, find or recommend a book, tool, software library, plug-in, tutorial, explain a technique or provide any other off-site resource are off-topic for Stack Overflow Stack Overflow — Paulie_D5 secs ago
@ThomasOwens software-developer tag? I can make meta question on that if that's what you need. 20 or 30 questions in this tag I passed through lately also made me wish to kill it but it's only about 1/4 of what is there so I can't tell without further analysis
I'm voting to close this question as off-topic because this is not the tablet shopping site. This site is for programming and programmers tools related questions, which is clearly stated in the help center guidelines. — Ken White8 secs ago
I'm voting to close this question as off-topic because it's not a programming question, and it's a software recommendation question, too. — Marcus Müller35 secs ago
Recently, I got the idea to write a series of posts about security, primarily aimed at every day people. I've come up with these topics and this order and wanted to get some feedback: (1) malware detection/prevention (2) safe use of social media/websites (3) device (computer/phone) protection (4) passwords, 2FA, and password managers (5) secure data deletion (6) private browsing (7) encryption and signatures.
I'm voting to close this question as off-topic because questions about how to configure server software should be asked on serverfault.com — Andreas33 secs ago
@ThomasOwens consider a bit different order, based on something like your estimate of primary audience interest instead of engineering oriented priorities. Also keep in mind that even though you target every day people your early readers will likely be more advanced category (everyday folks will probably get after / if those early readers interest bumps your series high enough in web searches). Alternative order could be like (2) -> (3) -> (6) -> (4) and then remaining 3 topics