So we've got 967 unanswered questions on the site. I've been going through the list and seeing if there are any I can take on. Does anyone else want to make a project of this? It appears that the SE overlords look poorly on unanswered questions, and it would make Ask Different a "better" site if we took some of these on. Is anyone with me?
I work with non-ASCII alphabets like Hebrew and Greek just a little bit, so I have the appropriate keyboard layouts available in the language and text menu in the top panel. However, I don't quite know all the characters yet, so I have to bring up the keyboard viewer when I want to type in those ...
@Daniel not a bad idea - the "answer a thon" mentioned in the latest SO blog post seems to have worked well for Travel. perhaps feature the top 20 in a blog post and encourage people to answer them?
the "No Answers" tab seems to automatically sort by votes
Sounds like a good idea to me. That's where I read it. The blog post. Thanks, Kyle. I knew I saw that somewhere, but forgot where, in my haste to go and try to tackle unanswered questions.
But if people vote for questions they are interested in (yes, I'm working on the blog post), that means they will float up. So if there are unanswered questions one wants to see at the top of the list, upvote them.
And sometimes the correct answer is the uninteresting "no, there isn't currently a way to do that". We could reduce our number of unanswered questions by encouraging that answer where appropriate.
@Daniel I noticed that too - the problem with "is there a way to do X" questions where there isn't a way to do X is that while a lot of people aren't aware of a way to do X, far fewer are confident that there really isn't a way to do X
also, if someone does post "it's not possible do to X" to a "how do I do X" question, the asker sometimes gets upset that they're not answering the question
But sometimes the canonical answer is, in fact, feature x is not supported; yes, one could hack the OS and invent their own way to sign the code, but that falls outside the scope of this non-programming site.
And some, um, highly localized questions might not be testable. As in "my machine doesn't work. Make it work." Which again makes me think that part of this cleanup effort might be identifying old unanswered questions that should be closed, both to mark over localized questions and to improve our numbers with the SE gods.
Maybe I should run for mod next time there's an election. Thinking about guiding the growth of the site is way cool. But @JasonSalaz would be an even better choice, with all he does for the podcast and all.
(sorry to run off; I heard a crazy crashing noise on the roof. Still don't know what it was, after walking around the house with a flashlight, but the structure all looks intact. Sure is windy, though)
I used to. I still write some papers, but I haven't gone to any conferences since switching from a liberal arts college to a community college. No funding these days. Maybe someday; there is a budget line for it, but it's currently empty.
But I've never been happier with my life.
But the real onerous taskmaster is Ask Different. That Fanatic badge was hard to get. I almost lost my streak when I was on the road for the wedding.
Beat me to the punch while I was typing. There could be an effective community bounty without any SE backing -- if there were, say, ten folks who were committed to the project who agreed that they'd upvote good answers, that's a +100 bounty right there.
But community commitment to upvoting good answers in the answer-a-thon might be all the reward we need. And if it gets people in the habit of voting for good answers, all the better.
@NathanGreenstein good idea, but I don't think that the promo ad would scale, but we could definitely feature them in a followup post on the effectiveness of the campaign
My research agenda wasn't going where I hoped it would, and I realized that my research wasn't about to change the world anytime soon, but my teaching just might.
I went from teaching four or five classes a year to 14.
And my stress level is so much lower.
Plus I got to move back to my home state, which is all kinds of wonderful.
I'm afraid Nathan had the right idea here. I put in a 13 hour day at work yesterday and today was another ten, so I think catching up on some sleep just might be wise. And then maybe putting up a Christmas tree before my kids go nuts that we haven't yet.
But I'll revisit this soon. I think this is really a promising idea.