No, I haz no link. By "we" I meant the Foundation, ticket numbers are available upon private request if you have access to the system.
-- Sent from my Palm Pre Carcharoth wrote:
Could you link to an example?
On Fri, Aug 28, 2009 at 8:49 AM, Keegan Paul<kgnpaul@gmail.com> wrote:
...and they are continuing to roll in. Any more firm ideas? They seem to
think that they are applying for "staff". I haven't the time to read all
reporting, feedback would be great.
On Wed, Aug 26, 2009 at 11:19 PM, Keegan Paul <kgnpaul@gmail.com> wrote:
Correction, it was a blog. I just don't remember where. If'n anyone else
does, please post. It was a good read.
On Wed, Aug 26, 2009 at 10:56 PM, Keegan Paul <kgnpaul@gmail.com> wrote:
It would be interesting if someone did a study on initial interactions
between newcomers and oldbies to see if anything can be improved. But
IMHO the best way to avoid newbies getting "bitten" is to help them
avoiding newbie mistakes in the first place - a good interface, the
right help and a few safety checks would go a long way. ("Whoa there
newbie, you just wiped the whole page. Here's how not to do that...")
Steve
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Well, hm. Hard to explain there as an "oldbie" what it was like as a
newbie. I happened to have good interactions based on concerns I had, as
Newyorkbrad went over in a Wikipedia Weekly cast. I only registered an
account because the History of Alaska was messed up and I thought it more
appropriate to have an account to complain :) . I've seen thousands of
editors come and go not only because of initial experience, but just passion
and care. There's no real matrix for it.
~Keegan
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