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Topic: stackexchange

Elder Scrolls vs. Call of Duty – Livestream @ 4 EST

11-11-11 by David Fullerton. 8 comments

As you may have noticed, we’re throwing a party over on the Gaming site.

If you’re not a gamer, you may not know that two huge games came out this week: The Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim and Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 3.  Game launches are always big for gaming.stackexchange.com because they’re a unique opportunity to get Google search result share before it vanishes into the void of vBulletin and phpBB.  We wanted to throw a big launch party for this year’s game release season, but we couldn’t agree on which game to pick.

So instead of deciding, we made it a competition: Skyrim vs. Modern Warfare 3.  Each game gets 7 days from when it launches to rack up as many views as it can.  Modern Warfare 3 has been out for 3 days and already racked up an impressive 10,000 views, and is still accelerating going into the weekend.  Skyrim just launched today, but is already starting to make its move.

To make it even more interesting, we’re giving away cool gaming prizes: free games for the top question and answer in each game, and one Grand Prize of a free console or graphics card chosen from everyone who contributed to the winning game (for more details, see skyrimvsmw3.com/rules).

Livestream Launch Party

To kick off the weekend, we’re throwing a live party at Stack Exchange HQ in New York. We’ll be live streaming the party and gameplay at skyrimvsmw3.com starting at 4pm EST.  You won’t want to miss it.  We’ll be featuring:

  • 10 gaming systems, including 2 projectors
  • Live color commentary & interviews by a pair of comedians
  • Music, food, and beverages (not included in livestream)

If you’re in New York and want to drop by, shoot us an email at team+gaming@stackexchange.com.  Otherwise, tune into the livestream at skyrimvsmw3.com starting at 4pm.


Skeptical of our comedic abilities?  Check out this video some of our CHAOSers shot at the midnight launch of Modern Warfare 3 to promote the contest:

The Art of Organizing CHAOS

11-08-11 by Abby T. Miller. 6 comments

Three months ago, CHAOS was born unto this world. There were just three of us to begin with, and nobody had any clue what our team was supposed to be accomplishing. Well, that’s not completely true: from Joel’s blog post, we knew that our eventual goal was to grow the Stack Exchange communities past some sort of imaginary tipping point at which they would begin to magically thrive on their own.

Easy, right?

So imagine for a moment that you’ve been hired as part of a team with this goal. You walk into work on your first day, fill out all your paperwork, get your computer set up with all the stuff you need, and learn all about how to adjust your Aeron chair. Now it’s time to get to work, what do you do first?

If you said “Perform a series of competitive analyses on almost all of the sites in the network,” you win! We started out by developing some metrics and completing what we called “scorecards” that analyzed each site’s position relative to other resources about those topics out there on the internet. New members of CHAOS trickled into the office during this process, and once we had completed analyses of an arbitrary a carefully predetermined number of sites, it was time to get down to brass tacks.

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Joel and Alex looked at the data we’d drummed up during our first few weeks and assigned tasks according to a very simple structure: each member of CHAOS got a site to work with. (We started out with Apple, Gaming, English, Android, DIY and Photography.) The first task was to clean up the titles of the top thousand questions on each site. That was a trivial task that only took a few hours and definitely didn’t make anybody want to stab themselves with a ping pong paddle. With the spring cleaning done, we got down to the experimental work. Our instructions: “Try everything.” We had some money and some ideas, so off we ran. While we certainly haven’t tried everything, we’ve done a lot: engaging twitter influencers with our sites, running contests, doing giveaways, hosting events, convincing people to review the sites, scheduled chat events, “seeding” the sites with questions… the list goes on! Not only that, but we grew to 8 team members, and we each picked up a few more sites.

But now that we’ve been at this for a few months, and seen some solid results, we’ve got that itch to try another tack and see if we can do even better (after all, we are all about experimentation).

these perhaps

So, starting this month, CHAOS is implementing a new strategy: we’re moving away from the “two sites per person, ready, go” model toward a new project-based approach. We’ve put together some mini-teams who will focus on specific projects, like the fellowship program for academic sites and a delegation to the contingent at Stack HQ that’s working on making the Gaming site more awesome. We’re also maintaining a handful of “midfielders” – a crack team of all-arounders who will apply our tactics wherever they seem to fit best.

CHAOS agents who are shifting to other areas will begin to wrap up their current projects and hand certain ongoing ones off to midfielders who are incorporating them into their new workflows. It will be a gradual transition over the course of the next month or so. Since we are essentially making up this process as we go along, this is almost certainly the first of many pivots CHAOS will make. We are, as Joel described, inventing a completely brand new method of community building.

Meet Bubbles (The Stack Exchange Mascot)

10-17-11 by Alex Miller. 18 comments

This past weekend, CHAOS was working the New York Comic Con (NYCC) here in New York City. It was kind of amazing. But CHAOS wasn’t the only one working hard this weekend….

Meet Bubbles, the Stack Exchange mascot! Some of you might recognize her from her cameo on the podcast video stream a few weeks ago, but her official debut was this weekend at Comic Con. We’ll be honest: not everyone here at Global Domination Headquarters was completely sold on getting Bubbles. I’m not naming any names, Joel, but some people just didn’t see the value in it. Well, the joke’s on those people, ’cause Bubbles was a smash hit.

 

CHAOS brought Bubbles to Comic Con with the intention of doing some grassroots promotion efforts for a number of our sites. While Sci-Fi and Gaming were the main focus, GameDev and Stack Overflow also got some time in the spotlight. Aarthi kept referring to Comic Con as “nerdvana,” and the description became more and more apt through the weekend. Cosplayers, comic book aficionados, gamers rooting for their favorite players — the showroom and lobby was a crowded hub of excited fannish energy, and CHAOS was right in the thick of it. We had special stickers and swag to hand out to convention attendees — most of it limited edition, no less, so they pretty much gave themselves away.

Since we know our users love freehand circles drawn in MS Paint in #FF0000, we’ll break down the swag for you that way. (Except in more colors — red is hard to see.)

Seriously, though, these really did just give away themselves. We had almost a hundred t-shirts to give away at the event, plus several hundred stickers of various makes. By 5pm on Sunday, when the conference ended, we were completely out of giveaways. Every Star Wars, Sci-Fi, Gaming, and Game Dev sticker was gone. We have a few shirts left, but people loved getting limited edition things. The best was seeing how excited people would get when we recognized their costumes, knew the answers to the questions, or wanted to take a picture with them.

Basically, the weekend was a blast, and we enjoyed just about every minute of it — especially the parts with the mascot. Keep an eye on the Science Fiction and Fantasy Blog for panel reports, a full convention write-up, and more.

For your time:

You can see all the pictures of Bubbles and her escapades in the album below, or in this Flickr slideshow.

Stack Exchange becomes an institutional member of the TeX Users Group

10-04-11 by Rebecca Chernoff. 6 comments

We’re pleased to announce that Stack Exchange is now an institutional member of the TeX Users Group.

TeX Users Group

The TeX Users Group (TUG) is a non-profit organization supporting the the TeX typesetting system community — or anyone generally interested in furthering the fields of typography and font design. It’s popular within many academic disciplines, several of which are represented in the Stack Exchange network.

TeX was originally popular as a tag on Stack Overflow and eventually grew into its own TeX Stack Exchange site through the Area 51 process. This community has actively contributed new packages back to the TeX community, and maintains a community blog.

As part of our institutional membership, we can also provide eight members of our TeX community individual memberships:

Stefan Kottwitz  Martin Scharrer  Andrew Stacey  Caramdir  Raphink  Patrick  Alan Munn  lockstep

This initiative was driven by the TeX Stack Exchange community itself; thanks for helping us make this happen! And if there are any other ways we can assist in supporting community conferences, associations, or organizations don’t hesitate to float it on your meta!

The Future of Community Wiki

08-19-11 by Grace Note. 20 comments

When you mark a post community wiki on a Stack Exchange site, that means …

  • this post can be edited by anyone with 100 reputation
  • this post does not generate any reputation for anyone when upvoted or downvoted

The main advantage of community wiki — more editing — was nerfed when we introduced suggested edits. With suggested edits, anyone, even an anonymous user, can edit anything — so long as another experienced user reviews and approves their edit.

This leaves many wondering — what’s the point of Community Wiki?

Community Wiki is not for Fun

With suggested edits now in place, you could argue that the removal of reputation from voting is now the only function of community wiki. Unfortunately, this means it is often seen as a magic switch to allow questionable content.

One of the first feature requests I saw on Meta Stack Overflow was Moderator Filtering of Highest Voted Questions, which was deemed necessary because questions like Coolest Server Names show the wrong side of the site. The actual problem-solving nature of sites is too easily buried under the weight of all these “fun” community wiki questions. At one point, “Our top voted post is an actual question!” was a point of pride. That’s … not a positive sign for a Q&A network.

Even when divorced from reputation, votes are hugely important. Something with a lot of votes means “this is what we deem quality content”, and votes are how we differentiate between answers when there is no single definitive answer. Community wiki should never be used as a get out of jail free pass for joke and fun questions. It may succeed in preventing any single individual from gaining reputation for posting a cartoon or joke, but the question will remain on the site. And it will now and forever be one of the top questions by votes, advertised to the world as one of the top rated things on your site.

Is that what you really want?

Community Wiki is not a “Quick Fix”

Community wiki isn’t only abused for “fun” or “getting-to-know-you” stuff, though. Many sites propose using community wiki to allow content that is on-topic and useful, but can be considered borderline or questionable in other ways. Someone notes that a certain class of question has problems, and proposes using community wiki as a quick fix.

If a question is valuable enough that you believe it belongs on the site, chances are you don’t need it to be community wiki! We welcome all contributions which improve the quality of a site and advertise its greatness to the rest of the world. If you allow a certain class of questions, but only under the stipulation that no one can earn reputation from them, you’ve strongly discouraged these sorts of questions. People aren’t going to put in nearly as much effort to ask them.

Instead, strive for quality. If you’re unsure a certain question class belongs on the site, don’t tolerate the worst examples — demand that these questions be awesome. Questions shouldn’t be swept under the rug with community wiki; they should get the same respect and treatment as the rest of your Q&A. If those questions are something you are uncomfortable showing to visitors … they probably don’t belong on your site.

Many things which “need” to be community wiki simply don’t. Sometimes it’s just a matter of understanding the root of a question: “Software to record video games” can be turned into a great question without needing the crutch of community wiki. Or, you may need to break the original question into smaller parts; a rather well-timed Ask Different Meta post explores this very avenue.

I’m relatively new here, but the examples of ‘community wiki’ that I’ve seen so far seem to be actively detrimental to the web site. For example, the ‘What Lion bugs irritate you the most?’ thread takes lots of good questions and answers that could (should?) be individually placed on the main page and effectively hides them in a single thread.

Detrimental indeed. Community wiki abuse includes its ability to mask or devalue important quality content just as often as it involves the presence of low quality content.

Sometimes you have content which is valuable and on-topic, but is perhaps a bit too popular. It runs the risk of overwhelming the rest of your site if it grows untamed. In these circumstances, community wiki can be a way to preserve the value of these posts while stifling their growth. Keep in mind, though, that in using community wiki to stifle growth, you should actually follow through with it — a site should never have more than one community wiki question for every hundred questions. Having too many community wiki questions defeats the entire purpose.

Community Wiki is primarily for Answers

If we haven’t said this enough already, questions rarely, if ever, need community wiki. What about answers? We removed the ability for users to make a question community wiki, but left the ability for users to make an answer wiki.

The intent of community wiki in answers is to help share the burden of solving a question. An incomplete “seed” answer is a stepping stone to a complete solution with help from others; an incomplete question is a hindrance and an obstacle to getting a solution as no one understands the inquiry. It is in answers that the goal of community wiki, for the community, by the community, shows its truest colors.

Yet even in answers, true collaboration is scarce. Most of the time, a single individual can provide a complete answer. There are even times where a question looks like it’ll need a massive effort, but one gallant user steps up to the plate with an impressive and comprehensive answer.

Community Wiki is dead. Long live Community Wiki!

Most of the time, you should be asking yourself “How can I improve this post so that community wiki isn’t needed?” Community wiki is like a cheese knife: it is a specialized tool to be used sparingly.

Community wiki is for that rare gem of a post that needs true community collaboration. That’s when community wiki shines. If your site is teeming with community wiki posts — particularly in questions — you should consider the above points carefully.