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I would find it useful if the member-name of the poster were shown after the information about the last revision/update time.
imho, this would be useful for detecting a series of posts by the same OP, etc.
thanks, Bill
«I want to stay as close to the edge as I can without going over. Out on the edge you see all kinds of things you can't see from the center» Kurt Vonnegut.
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There was actually a deliberate decision not to do this because we want questions answered (or voted or reported or even closed) based on the question, not the author.
To view all questions by a single author use http://www.codeproject.com/script/Answers/MemberPosts.aspx?tab=questions&mid=">http://www.codeproject.com/script/Answers/MemberPosts.aspx?tab=questions&mid=[member id]. However, I'm guessing you're looking at spotting, within the QA list itself, a series of questions from the same member?
cheers
Chris Maunder
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Chris Maunder wrote: However, I'm guessing you're looking at spotting, within the QA list itself, a series of questions from the same member? Yes.
I note that on the C# language forum, you do always see the author's name (of course, that forum is in a different format than QA forums). The difference in the way QA forums are structured compared to language forums, like C#, is the source of my hypothesis that the original intent here was to have the language forums serve/perform a different purpose than the QA forums, within the context of the whole site.
That's my excuse for sometimes decrying the slip-sliding over time of the C# forum into a second QA forum, rather than a place where language issues get discussed in depth. However, there are threads in the C# forum where discussion does go marvelous deep into language issues, and, certainly, many threads there have a 'technical depth' you see more rarely in QA (in part, thanks to the zeal of our current crop of QA's reputation-uber-alles hotshots ?).
On the C# language forum, I 'enjoy' the fact that it is easy for me to spot and ignore the on-going chain of messages from the CP member who's been on the site over 13 years, and never done anything but ask questions, and who, to my knowledge, has never thanked anyone who replied to his messages, or voted-up anyone who replied, and whose questions suggest that he has CP doing the work of the business he claims to own ... for him.
But, please don't think my enumeration of quibbles here is anything more than the finicky nit-picking of someone who, admitted to heaven, after a while started noticing a few pimples on 'angels'
thanks, Bill
«I want to stay as close to the edge as I can without going over. Out on the edge you see all kinds of things you can't see from the center» Kurt Vonnegut.
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Chris Maunder wrote: There was actually a deliberate decision not to do this because we want questions answered (or voted or reported or even closed) based on the question, not the author. That is a good point. I also agree with Bill, it would make it easier to deal with questions.
There are only 10 types of people in the world, those who understand binary and those who don't.
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How about adding an algorithm that displays featured articles which checks to see if the author has logged in within the past X days.
That way, authors who haven't visited CP in X days don't get their articles displayed.
Also, maybe a date limit on those which only goes back 2 years at most. Maybe only 1 year.
Does anyone read these suggestions?
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And may I ask why?
Does the fact that the author isn't active make an article less worth?
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I guess because I think of the articles as the beginning of communication on a topic.
I think this site is dedicated to instruction and discussion so if the original author hasn't logged in within some large number of days it means it will probably be difficult to discuss her intentions with the article.
Although I understand there could be good articles with good content that could be missed. But for those types of things it is probably better that someone is searching specifically for them anyways.
Thanks for discussing this. I hope to hear your insight on this.
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Yes, I get your point, but some articles have such a limited subject or are so well written that there's not much to discuss.
That said, please don't misunderstand me the wrong way, I'm quite disappointed in the lack of response on my own articles.
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I think you are backing up my point though. You would get more attention on your articles because they would bubble to the top more often, because you log on often. There could be a whole weighting thing with author login, article vote rating, number of views.
It seems like that would better define "Featured Articles".
Edit:
I will also make my way to your articles and check them out.
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I think that some articles (very highly rated by many voters, history of revision by the author over time, history of good support by the author over time) are CodeProject's "Jewels in the Crown," and deserve to get featured in rotation, or whatever, no matter how many years mileage they have.
If an article has not been highly voted by many voters, and is more than some months old, I don't think it should be featured.
Those are my preferences, but, as I write this, I know I don't know what method is used to select featured articles now; so, perhaps we should ask CodeProject staff about that ?
cheers, Bill
«I want to stay as close to the edge as I can without going over. Out on the edge you see all kinds of things you can't see from the center» Kurt Vonnegut.
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Good points. I agree.
The "how long it has been since author logged in" could just be a weight value or something.
Thanks.
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I read every suggestion, and they all get sorted and either fixed or put on the TODO.
The reason for the featured articles is to provide a place to pop up Really Good Stuff that you not otherwise catch. Changing it to restrict it based on author activity changes it to a system that would Show Active Authors Their Articles. Which is not a bad thing, but just not the original intent.
cheers
Chris Maunder
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Fair enough. Thanks for the reply.
I thought of the suggestion because I was reading an older article which had popped up and then examined the author's profile and it seemed to indicate the person hadn't been around in a while.
Thanks for your time.
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Hi,
My understanding is that when I make a change to my blog I need approval from someone in the community. Is it completely random or are they put in a queue or something? Because sometimes it takes minutes sometimes 5-6 hours so I don't know what the criteria is. Also is there a way to speed up the process if it's rather urgent (I don't have a such situation at the moment but thought would be nice to know for future reference).
Thanks,
Volkan
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Each new blog entry or blog entry update goes into the Article Approval queue. If it's just an update during business hours on a weekday, it shouldn't take that long. If it's outside of business articles, a new post, or on the weekend it will take longer.
During business hours on a weekday, if it's an emergency, shoot me an email sean@codeproject.com and link me the update and tell me to "get it updated, chop chop."
Thanks,
Sean Ewington
CodeProject
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Cool, thank you for the information.
Also good to know what to do in case of an emergency.
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On the profile page when I enter my linkedin public profile (Your LinkedIn Profile URL) the field strips out the periods and when I click on my linked in button on my profile it gives error.
https://www.linkedin.com/in/stevencontos[^]
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Hello,
On my blog I use an AWS S3 bucket to store images and they are publicly available. I never had an issue with the imported blogs before but today I became aware of a strange issue with my 8th import!
For some reason, the images were renamed and they were expected to have been uploaded to CP. Is this a new behavioural change with imports that we should be aware of? Or is it because of something done during the editing process?
This is the article I'm talking about: [^]
Any comments and pointers are welcome.
Thanks,
Volkan
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All the images look OK to me.
"These people looked deep within my soul and assigned me a number based on the order in which I joined."
- Homer
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Yeah that's also a weird thing I couldn't understand. It happened to me only once so I cannot reproduce the issue.
When I edited the article on the right side all images were reported as missing even though I was able to view them fine so I ignored that but someone else also reported that the images were missing. So I really have no clue what happened there and how many people are seeing the article fine and how many with the missing images. Really confused..
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Hi,
I incorrectly flagged This User[^] as a spammer
Could an admin please remove this please?
Thanks.
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No problem. Done
Thanks,
Sean Ewington
CodeProject
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... much appreciated, Thank you 
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If any one reply to solution or comment, I'm not getting notified.
Is this feature is removed or am I having something else issue ?
Looking forward to know about this.
-KR
modified 21-Oct-15 13:23pm.
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