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Discussion or Debate

Have forums moved towards politics

         

minnapple

5:41 am on Feb 2, 2005 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



We used to share openly in forums [ that has been a while ]. Now we argue our own opinions and include previous posts in little gray boxes.

Have forums moved from discussions to debates?

SEOMike

4:46 pm on Feb 2, 2005 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



I don't think we argue here at all! That's just what you think! ;)

seriously though... I have noticed this a lot as well. It may be a result of the fact that a lot of topics have been talked to death by those of us that have been around a little bit.

I too get frustrated when the topic of a thread dissolves as it grows. Sometimes it works for the creator of the thread to get people back on track, and it works really well when a mod does.

Brett_Tabke

2:32 pm on Feb 3, 2005 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Administrator 10+ Year Member Top Contributors Of The Month



Ya, there are a few who like to debate.

The amazing thing to me, is how fast a thread or discussion can turn on just a couple of posts.

Any suggestions as to what we can do?

minnapple

1:59 am on Feb 5, 2005 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



Soft hand . . . .
To serve as a reminder of what the thread is really about,the original post could appear on the top of the page, no matter how many pages are contained in the thread.

It may keep the thread on track and some type of friendly reminder about keeping on subject could be included.

Hard hand . . . .
Any user can post x-amount of times in any thread.
Once they have used up their allotment, they are done.
Basically it would force people to state their ideas and information clearly and carefully.

This would really shorten up the threads.
3 posts per person should be enough to get info out after that it is likely debate.

vkaryl

4:56 am on Feb 5, 2005 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



Really good ideas, minnapple.... REALLY good.

[From one who likes to "debate", but tries to keep it in foo....]

pendanticist

6:19 am on Feb 5, 2005 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



URL Drops too. I've seen at least six today alone. Porno, an engine or two. Self-promotional, to be sure.

If the poster has reached his / her limit, by whatever standard, how can those who can no longer participate in that thread, remove it from "Your WebmasterWorld Threads", without involving a mod, or system admin?

For the record, I agree. Lots more debate and condecension lately.

Let me add: Those that post over you, saying essentially the same thing you just did, as though you hadn't said a thing.

MatthewHSE

3:40 pm on Feb 11, 2005 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



The following is all in fun, means nothing, totally faceitious, etc...

We used to share openly in forums [ that has been a while ].

No it hasn't, you just think it has.

Now we argue our own opinions

Who's arguing their own opinions? I'm just saying what I think.

and include previous posts in little gray boxes.

Handy, isn't it?

Have forums moved from discussions to debates?

Certainly not, what a silly question!

And just to emphasize that this is just in fun -- ;)

sun818

7:11 am on Feb 12, 2005 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member Top Contributors Of The Month



Remind user of TOS numbers 4, 14, 19, and 26. Moderators won't take serioius action unless the user comments are extreme. I think most times you have to fend for yourself. It is the mod's discretion how they want to handle a situation, but I personally stopped subscribing because I didn't feel the response to a personal attack was handled sufficiently. But what you gonna do?

createErrorMsg

3:48 am on Feb 13, 2005 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



This is a tricky thread to respond to. I don't want to become a case-in-point, but I think this...

Any user can post x-amount of times in any thread.
Once they have used up their allotment, they are done.
...
3 posts per person should be enough to get info out after that it is likely debate.

...is a bad idea. In the more technically oriented forums (CSS, JavaScript, PHP) there are often threads which involve one or two members guiding a third through some specific, and often complicated, process. Posts for those members in those threads can number five or six or higher, all of them worthwhile contributions, resulting not only in a satisfied OPer, but a great reference peice for searchers to land on, as well.

I've been on both ends of this sort of discussion (asker and helper) and would venture to say that they are the threads which turn first-time posters looking for a specific solution into regular contributors.

Point being: limiting the number of posts could well be the death knell for those sorts of threads.

And I also want to add that I love the grey QUOTE boxes and think they are an extremely helpful communication devise. This very post is a great example. With all the things in this thread so far, being able to quote the exact lines which inspired my response actually makes reading the thread easier, not harder.

cEM

anallawalla

1:11 pm on Feb 13, 2005 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Administrator 10+ Year Member Top Contributors Of The Month



To serve as a reminder of what the thread is really about,the original post could appear on the top of the page, no matter how many pages are contained in the thread.

I saw this feature in a custom-written forum - great idea (to place it at the top), esp if you can set if off so that it because obvious. On WW, the original post is way below my screen and only when I respond. The one I saw displays the original post on subsequent pages even when one is just reading posts.

Marketing Guy

3:31 pm on Feb 13, 2005 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



How about giving mod rights to thread starters so they can be responsible for defining the boundaries of their own threads? Perhaps limit it to certain forums, certain post counts, etc?

Or pulling from the suggestion about x posts per thread, perhaps the thread starter could dictate this value? If they only want an opinion from people, then they could select "one reply per user", however if they want some ongoing or undefined amount of input, then they could allow unlimited replies per user?

Perhaps thread starters could state when they post a new thread which types of users they want to respond (ie just Senior members and above)? Maybe even create new user groups (opt in / out) for this purpose (eg, "MSN", "CSS"). Users could opt in to whichever groups they wanted and those they didn't want to discuss could be hidden. Taking this further, perhaps mods and admin could pick some members to be "experts" in specific categories and given them more write permissions or whatever.

Scott

limbo

9:45 am on Feb 14, 2005 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



Some of these ideas for forum quenching sound good but should probably only be applied to certain fora or choice threads within fora.

Those threads where the signal to noise ratio is much higher should be left as they are. CSS, Graphics, HTML, javascript, PHP etc, all these places very rarely get the bewilderingly off topic posting or thread hijacking you see elsewhere, and are more helpful and concise because of it.

It's the 'money' threads that get most of the trouble.

... and thread constraints in foo would be catclysm of catastrophic cats ;)