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Jun 3, 2020 at 13:30 history edited CommunityBot
Commonmark migration
Mar 20, 2017 at 10:31 history edited CommunityBot
replaced http://meta.stackexchange.com/ with https://meta.stackexchange.com/
Aug 20, 2015 at 18:27 comment added PearsonArtPhoto I think I would group these into 4 categories, but not be completely independent. Removing beta label, including in footer, and community ads together, increased reputation/ migration paths (reputation could be first, but should be a requisite to migration), elections, and site design.
Aug 20, 2015 at 15:38 comment added Vogel612's Shadow @JanMurphy that sounds wonderful, yes you could say that
Aug 20, 2015 at 15:33 comment added Jan Murphy Would it be fair to summarize your answer like this? The process a site goes through (instead of being beta/graduated) would be analogous to what a user does: earning privs in steps as it goes along.
Aug 20, 2015 at 11:41 comment added David Mulder @Vogel612'sShadow A tryout phase before committing to something makes a lot of sense. And commitment means things like running moderator elections, allocating resources, allowing migrations (more freely), advertising it, etc. And no, it definitely doesn't matter a lot to outsiders, but SE is already a confusing enough place for insiders as it is, making that even more confusing rather than less confusing is a terrible idea. After all, as there is a single point in time where commitment is decide and all those things flow from that point, why split at all :S .
Aug 20, 2015 at 11:35 comment added David Mulder @DeerHunter As far as I know the idea is that even despite the decline the patents.SE will not be deleted. Something that can happen still happen to beta sites.
Aug 20, 2015 at 10:47 comment added Vogel612's Shadow @DavidMulder the concept of "beta" and "graduated" is destroying the homogenity of the SE network. What difference does it make whether a site runs community ads or doesn't? Or has elected moderators instead of appointed pro-tems? What significant difference to an outsider does graduation bring (apart from design)? Your point seems moot to me, because the most significant parts of graduation are all about moderation, which is in no way related to the "homogenity of the SE network"
Aug 20, 2015 at 10:39 comment added Deer Hunter @DavidMulder - a graduated site can still decline and die a miserable death. Ask Patents, anyone?
Aug 20, 2015 at 10:14 comment added David Mulder The only real problem is that graduation should truly be graduation, and that's now (more or less) happening. As soon as it's clear that a site is going to stay there is no more waiting for resources (design) and with a click of a button the site changes. All current problems are primarily caused due to sites staying in beta all the time whilst they actually aren't truly in beta.
Aug 20, 2015 at 10:12 comment added David Mulder -1 Honestly, I think it's a great idea to have a point of no return for sites. Once a site is graduated (which should a lot quicker now) you know for sure that it's going to stay around and based on that a lot of choices are made (design, migration, etc.), but the main reason for -1'ing would be that the idea of seperating the different things that fall under graduation even further would destroy the homogeneity of the SE network significantly. Something that really should be limited as much as possible. (cont.)
Aug 20, 2015 at 9:34 comment added Pavel @Vogel612'sShadow: now I understand your answer. I've understood that the proposed state is meant as a base for further discussion and probably will be changed later from the question itself + from older posts on this topic, but this might not be clear enough without Abby's post. What I don't understand is that your post gets quite a lot of upvotes even after Abby's clarification. Is it just a fear that things will freeze in the current state, in spite of some mods' statements?
Aug 20, 2015 at 9:13 comment added Vogel612's Shadow @Pavel "as you thought it was the definite state" ... well. Yes I thought exactly that. If you check the timestamps, the explanatory comments / answer by abby hairboat were only posted until after this answer. Which means that the premise of this answer is flawed. Then again I do not propose "reverting" to the old state. I just state that the current mechanism is flawed. Maybe less so or more so than the old mechanism, but still flawed that I am not willing to settle for that
Aug 20, 2015 at 9:03 comment added Pavel Did I understand well that you in fact propose: "revert to the previous state, which was even worse, before the long-term plans can be implemented"? The state proposed now is a stage on the path to the abandonning of "raduation", at least the SE staff propose it as such. You nitpick as though it was the definite state.
Aug 19, 2015 at 23:06 comment added RubberDuck I couldn't have said it better myself. ++ The only thing I can possibly add is that if there is a technical reason for tying site design to privileges (as the system is currently implemented), I really wish someone from SE would just say so. As a programmer, I can understand that something is coupled together that shouldn't be, but I just don't buy the "you need something to celebrate" line.
Aug 19, 2015 at 21:12 comment added Catija I really recommend you read some of Robert's answers on this subject. It sounds pretty obvious that SE is aware that the system is imperfect but that it is best to implement things gradually rather than shocking the system with a sudden change.
Aug 19, 2015 at 19:21 comment added hairboat "Yes, I am proposing to remove the whole graduation thing." -> I agree. I think that's probably in the works down the road. Like Ana said: this is the first step. We haven't made any changes to this process in 5 years, and we're finally re-examining it now. It used to be one step. Now it's two steps (phases). We'll keep working on it, and it will be more steps soon.
Aug 19, 2015 at 18:13 history answered Vogel612's Shadow CC BY-SA 3.0