jayjg wrote:
On 4/1/06, Ray Saintonge <saintonge(a)telus.net>
wrote:
Steve Bennett wrote:
On 3/31/06, geni <geniice(a)gmail.com>
wrote:
The two year version is more likely to know why
we are where we are
now. Admins who don't know this tend to cause interesting problems.
This can also be the case with returning admins. There are other
differences that are also likely to exist.
Could a one month editor not be a good admin? If they could, then why
do we have such prejudice against the idea?
A one-month editor could be a good admin. What a minimum time rule
really tests is patience. Is he willing to stick around when things get
tedious. If he goes away when he doesn't get made a sysop right away
maybe he wasn't meant to be one.
It tests more than patience. A one-month editor might be a good admin, or
might not. It's really hard to tell. Aside from the issue mentioned before
(people who are trying to get sockpuppet accounts to admin status), how do
we know how the person will perform under pressure? Does he really know the
policies? It's really hard to get to know anything about an editor after
just one month, and it's not like we're suffering from a lack of admins - we
have almost 900.
So, why do we still have backlogs?
Not all admins are active, and not all admins are suitable for all jobs.
Conversely, we have a lot of non-admins who *are* active, and are doing
jobs which admins aren't.
--
Alphax -
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:Alphax
Contributor to Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia
"We make the internet not suck" - Jimbo Wales
Public key:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:Alphax/OpenPGP