Solar wrote:faster than you can say "can't compile a cross-compiler".
Cheers,
Adam
Solar wrote:faster than you can say "can't compile a cross-compiler".
For what it's worth, I completely dissent. This is too complicated and it promotes too much of a top heavy management structure. There aren't enough constantly active/long staying users for this to be of any real value. Yeeesh.neato wrote:Not if the users post their questions to the proper group. Those threads will be quite active, as long as the users do their job. With a little rules, this could work out, for example, each Group has a Captain. Captain approves membership. If a member is offline too long, Captain revokes membership. If Captain goes offline too long, the group can appoint a new Captain or else choose to lock the group. If that happens, then the threads will be become read-only and that groups forum will merge with the general forum as an archive (subforum). If a user wants to re-open the group, he can ask a Mod to give him/her ownership and the group will be restored as before. Groups cannot be created until there are at least 1 Captain and 3 Members. All groups must be approved by Admin or Mod majority vote. Maybe start it off on a trial period (30 days) to see if it works, if not, it shouldn't be too hard to end the trial, merge all the group threads to the general forum, and kill the groups. So, it wont hurt to try.
Eric S. Raymond wrote:In general, questions to a well-selected public forum are more likely to get useful answers than equivalent questions to a private one. There are multiple reasons for this. One is simply the size of the pool of potential respondents. Another is the size of the audience; hackers would rather answer questions that educate many people than questions serving only a few.
(...)
Hackers believe solving problems should be a public, transparent process during which a first try at an answer can and should be corrected if someone more knowledgeable notices that it is incomplete or incorrect. Also, helpers get some of their reward for being respondents from being seen to be competent and knowledgeable by their peers.
When you ask for a private reply, you are disrupting both the process and the reward. Don't do this. It's the respondent's choice whether to reply privately — and if he does, it's usually because he thinks the question is too ill-formed or obvious to be interesting to others.
That also annoys me and I have to revert to Google (inurl:forum.osdev.org). Can this limit be removed? I'm sure if you're searching for a popular term then you don't mind if you get 5,000 results.Combuster wrote:Since you mentioned tags, one thing I'd consider a serious flaw of the forum software is that the common subjects are unsearchable, even if they are valid and meaningful queries
I'm not the highest poster on these forums, but several years ago I received an message through my website saying "I saw you're writing your own OS on OSDev.org, can you help me with this problem."neato wrote:That's crazy. Why would anyone do that? You post your question to the ENTIRE group and someone in that group answers the question. No need to PM anyone.... or people will find the highest post count in the group and PM them.
Place + in front of a word which must be found and - in front of a word which must not be found. Put a list of words separated by | into brackets if only one of the words must be found. Use * as a wildcard for partial matches.
You're thinking of the bad type of 'hacker', rather than the one we mean.neato wrote:Sorry, didn't realize this was hacking forum. Code Red?
I think this would be an appropriate title to give to anyone who repeatedly asks dumb questionsSolar wrote:"can't compile a cross-compiler"
Yes, but then you're using Google's (immensely huge) server power, rather than this forum's.MessiahAndrw wrote:That also annoys me and I have to revert to Google (inurl:forum.osdev.org)
That's what you get for not checking post dates. Someone may as well come along and kill these three posts then, seeing as they're irrelevant.Combuster wrote:Wow, necroposting in reply to a banned troll. I haven't seen that one before