Scott,
That's why the rest of my email focussed on things that we could that would improve
editor retention and which would be uncontentious, but also there is a third question, are
people's assumptions re newbie behaviour true? This is where research would be useful.
Where the problem lies in mutually contradictory assumptions about user behaviour then the
best way to break the logjam is with research, now I'm confident that the research
will support my assumptions, but if I am wrong then I'm prepared to back solutions
that I have previously opposed.
Regards
Jonathan Cardy
On 26 Sep 2014, at 09:56, Scott Hale
<computermacgyver(a)gmail.com> wrote:
On Fri, Sep 26, 2014 at 1:46 PM,
WereSpielChequers <werespielchequers(a)gmail.com> wrote:
Attn Luca and Scott
There are some things best avoided as going against community expectations. I would be
happy to see flagged revisions deployed on the English Wikipedia but I'm well aware
that there is a significant lobby against that of people who believe that it is important
that your edit goes live immediately. And with the community somewhat burned by bad
experiences with recent software changes now would be a bad time to suggest such a
controversial change.
Yes. Completely agree, and that was the exact point of my first email:
On Fri, Sep 26, 2014 at 9:15 AM, Scott Hale
<computermacgyver(a)gmail.com> wrote:
And that is the fundamental flaw with this whole email thread. The question needing to be
answered isn't "what increases new user retention". The real question is
"what increases new user retention and is acceptable to the most active/helpful
existing users". The second question is much harder than the first.
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