New Slash Version v1.0.3 109
pudge writes "Yo. We released slash-1.0.3. Bug reports and CVS and file downloads are on SourceForge. Slashcode is now hosted at Exodus with Slashdot and Freshmeat. "
The scary part is that now Slashdot and Slashcode are totally synched up... which means programmers can e-mail diffs instead of bug reports and feature suggestions (hint hint hint!)
What did you do with CmdrTaco?! (Score:4)
Woohoo! (Score:1)
Slash Setup (Score:1)
--
then it comes to be that the soothing light at the end of your tunnel is just a freight train coming your way
What About Ad Rotation? (Score:2)
feature suggestions (Score:5)
/.-fu Master (Score:1)
Why is it such a big deal again? What's so special about some forum code? Of-course it is nice and all but is it really scallable to millions and maybe even billions of users? Imagine the time when EVERYONE on this planet becomes a
Good to hear ... (Score:1)
When I have set my default threshold to tree and commentsort to nested, and when I click on the "Parent" link of a comment, where the parent is beyond my threshold, I get nothing or at least nothing useful. (No cid and pid=0).
It looks like now I have no excuse any more not to fix this bug myself. :-/
--Carpe diem!
Re:the reason they dont switch.. (Score:2)
And what's wrong with using what you know? If the code _works_ and it works just fine, why write it in a "more complicated" language? Did I mention that the code works?
Re:feature suggestions (-1, Redundant) (Score:1)
Re:The *real* wonderful part... (Score:3)
the real wonderful part is that there will now be lots more 'pairs of eyes' checking the slashcode for loopholes and bugs that will allow quicker bugfixes and a more robust system...
ai731
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Re: The *real* scary part... (Score:1)
Carpe diem!
Re:the reason they dont switch.. (Score:2)
Some of us out here are even worse programmers, and wouldn't have the skill to write something on this scale if they wanted to. I should know, I'm one of them.
I setup slash a few months ago, and had a major learning experience with apache, perl, CPAN and funky virtual server setups. Now, I've got it running great and I'm extending the functionality by running Zope side-by-side.
I've been talking about my website idea for a LONG time with my family. Thanks to these lousy programmers, an even worse programmer has been able to impress a lot of people.
Now, if I can just get hits.
Dave
Does it serve properly yet? (Score:3)
Has anyone else noticed this?
Re:What did you do with CmdrTaco?! (Score:5)
Every time you ask about his release, they'll keep him in captivity for another 24 hours...
Re:feature suggestions (Score:1)
I remember giggling reading the Zeldman interview [slashdot.org] when he made the joke about the teal/black design of /.
Either he was pulling punches or he doesn't read the Apache and BSD topics.
Re:Does it serve properly yet? (Score:1)
Re:feature suggestions (Score:1)
Meta-moderation in 1.0.3? (Score:1)
---------------------------------
Re:feature suggestions (-1, Redundant, -1, Redunda (Score:1)
I do like the basic gray and green, but the other sections suck nuts.
Since
-ed
Re:the reason they dont switch.. (Score:1)
Re:What About Ad Rotation? (Score:2)
Re:Don't you think it's time to switch from Slash? (Score:4)
Sorry..... I'll shoot myself now.
Definate Requisite (Score:1)
Re:feature suggestions (Score:1)
Isn't it a little soon to be starting that? Support for these languages is only beginning to emerge in major web browsers; even when (say) Mozilla's ready, to put everything into XHTML or XML would be to tie /.'s readership to one of two browsers, which contravenes one of the goals of /. -- to reach as many nerds as possible.
Now, if you're talking about having this as an option for those bleeding-edgers, you may have something there.
Currently, is there a useable browser that understands XML other than IE 5, or other Win32-only (near enough) apps? Lack of test systems may figure into the equation here.
Re:feature suggestions (Score:4)
I'd support XHTML (but go easy on the CSS), but not XML. XML doesn't allow much extra that can't be achieved anyway by screen scraping, and that's pretty easy in XHTML (Palm portallers, read the last para before screaming at me).
The only real benefit from going with XML would be for people who wanted to leech Slashdot content and rebadge it on other sites in a fairly greedy manner. This isn't something that many will want, nor should it be encouraged. If there's a demand for headline and link-swapping between sites, then use RSS - it's what it's there for.
The downside of XML, is that it's compatible with nothing out there browser-wise and so you'd inevitably fall back to a two-formats legacy position, probably involving HTML 3.2 for the lesser stream.
XHTML Transitional doesn't break any existing browsers, and it still lets you use enough format control to make it viewable on old Netscapes. A good push for WAI standards on Slash content would fit in with an XHTML move and would probably benefit people doing portals for wireless and small-screen devices. I certainly don't think that wireless portalling needs XML (with a SlashSchema) instead of XHTML.
Suggestions for discussion (Score:5)
Theming
Everyone bitches about the colors, especially in the BSD and Apache sections (and, I must say, YRO isn't much better). Why not setup a colors preferences panel? That shouldn't be too hard to implement.
Removal of Comments
Given the recent controversy over Microsoft and what not, give users the ability to remove their own comments, maybe with a karma penalty or something. We can moderate our system, but we can't responsibly manage it.
That's just a couple of ideas, and there's tons more, I'm sure. On to Slash 2.0!
More room in Personal Box! (Score:1)
Ah, and stop killing Opera.
Re:feature suggestions (-1, Redundant, -1, Redunda (Score:2)
I don't know if any browser lets you specify different stylesheets for different sites though.
Re:feature suggestions (Score:1)
XML itself does not solve anything. I might write XML document like:
...
...
<news>
<newsheader article="https://www.domain.com/articles?id=1255" link="http://www.slashdot.org/">Slashdot supports XML!</newsheader>
</news>
but what browser could render that? There are no rules how to present information in XML. You need CSS or XLS also and AFAIK there are no browsers that support all of CSS or XLS correctly.
_________________________
Re:/.-fu Master (Score:1)
Re:feature suggestions (Score:2)
Two points about this.
First, I think there is better XML display support [xml.com] than you might think. Given that you're realistically looking something like a year ahead on this, I don't see why you shouldn't go for the gusto.
You also suggest that going with just XHTML won't require any fall-back position. I'm really not sure that's true. And even if it were true, you could turn an internal XML representation into the traditional, cruftified Slashdot HTML that we and our browsers know and love.
But, having said that, I agree that XHTML (with full CSS) is waaaay better than nothing. Given that Slashdot is News for Nerds, I see no reason why it shouldn't be at least closer to the leading edge with respect to style sheets and standards compliance.
Re:The *real* scary part... (Score:1)
Re:Good to hear ... (Score:1)
Re:Suggestions for discussion (Score:1)
//rdj
Peace at last (Score:1)
Re:Does it serve properly yet? (Score:1)
Am I the only one to see that behaviour ?
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So fix it! (Score:1)
I am sure the
No removal of comments, please! (Score:1)
And what about replies to removed comments? Would they be removed then, too? If they wouldn't, you would end up with comments without correlation.
NB, I think the above comment is totally overrated. :-(
--Carpe diem!
Re:What About Ad Rotation? (Score:2)
Anyway, if you're still interested, even after I've shamefully confessed that it's all based on flat text files, please email me and I'll let you know when I've got a SourceForge project ready for it.
perl -le 'print "Hello, world."' (Score:1)
If... (Score:1)
-Why, or why not ?
-Would PHP(4) keep up with the amount of traffic ?
-Would PHP make this better maintable and expandable by other people ?
-And would PHP increase the development speed ?
I'd personaly give all of the above questions a positive answer...
Re:feature suggestions (Score:1)
Ah, but who says you have to present the clients with XML? You can use XSL/whatever-transformations-you-desire to spit it out as HTML (or XHTML) from the server side today, and later you can just start handing the markup sheet to browsers that understand it.
Semantic markup rules.
Re: Suggestion (Score:1)
Carpe diem!
Styles sheets (Score:1)
No, it wouldn't. Actually, it would put *less* load on the server, as well as consume less badwidth.
The script should form the page with no formatting, just *valid* content. A .css would be generated on the fly, but this would be just a MySQL lookup, real fast.
Alternatively, the style sheet could be embedded in the document or stored as "username".css, being updated each time the user decides to change preferences.
Another thing that is really in need of change is the time it takes to download pages. Why throw everything together in a single table? Couldn't we have a table for the story, sections, links and preferences, and then have the posts outside tables, or arranged in strips of, say, 1 thread per table?
Before anyone asks:
Re:feature suggestions (Score:1)
need to account for people with high karma (Score:1)
You, for example, seem to have high enough karma for your posts to default at 2. However, once in a while you may say something that really doesn't deserve a 2 - so then the "overrated" moderation would be appropriate, even though no one has moderated the comment in question yet.
Re:Meta-moderation in 1.0.3? (Score:1)
"overrated" needed for automatic +1 (Score:1)
Some people get a +1 because of high karma, and then end up posting a bunch of extremely mediocre messages at a starting score of 2. For people that browse with a threshold (or highlight threshold) of 2, as I used to do, this means a lot of tripe shows up. This can be annoying to those who keep such a threshold in order to get a collection of high quality comments to read.
People who get the +1 can post a comment without the +1 by checking a box. This is a good thing to do if the message is not particularly informative, insightful, interesting, funny, etc. People who post mediocre comments at a score of 2 deserve to get an "overrated" moderation.
That's my opinion of course.
Re:Meta-moderation in 1.0.3? (Score:2)
If you have never meta-moderated, go to http://slashdot.org/metamod.pl [slashdot.org] and get in on the fun.
Anomalous: inconsistent with or deviating from what is usual, normal, or expected
Re:More room in Personal Box! (Score:1)
What do you mean "killing Opera"? If bad HTML is making it die, that's Opera's fault for not being robust enough.
Re:So fix it! (Score:4)
As to us "not knowing SQL" (I am not sure if that is tongue-in-cheek or not), well, all I can say is that there is a lot of really old code in there. Sure, you are going to see a lot of cruft. We're working hard on rewriting major portions of the thing. You may see some code in there that does nothing at all, or does nothing useful, or does something bad. All I can say to that is "duh." Send a patch or a bug report if you like, we will certainly appreciate it.
But don't bother pointing out that, gasp, bugs and bad code are in Slash. That's a given. That's why we are working so hard on it and devoting so many resources to it (four full-time developers, IIRC, not including CmdrTaco, plus several more, like Cliff, who are splitting time with Slash and other projects). The code was pretty good for what it was, but over time it got crufty, and now we are going back and fixing it. That's how these things work.
Re:need to account for people with high karma (Score:2)
//rdj
Re:Meta-moderation in 1.0.3? (Score:1)
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Re: diffs instead of bug reports. (Score:1)
HTML formatting suggestion (Score:3)
The most important goal of this change should be code compactness, whereby repetitive use of bgcolor, font, align, etc is replaced with simplified CSS classes. This should significantly reduce bandwidth requirements per user, most important considering the ever-solid limit of 56k dial-up.
While it is nowhere near valid HTML 4, users of the very latest nightly builds of Mozilla (an important display bug was recently fixed), or the excellent IE5 for Windows (I hate Microsoft more than YOU do, but their HTML rendering engine is admittedly a work of art), can check out the following link here: whirlpool.net.au [whirlpool.net.au]
It's my hobby site with a slash-esque feel, written totally by hand and powered with Cold Fusion (it's no PHP, but it's easy and fast). The design concept, programming, content and everything else was done by me.
I would be very interested in donating a design structure for Slashdot, keeping in mind download times, the legacy look-and-feel, and HTML 4 compliance. test
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Re:If... (Score:2)
I would absolutely not go to PHP, basically because I love Perl and don't like PHP.
Would PHP increase development speed? No. I am very fast at developing with Perl, and I don't see how developing in another language would be faster. Even if I could learn PHP real well, I would still be as fast or faster in Perl. For other people, it might increase development speed, I dunno. Not for me, certainly.
Would PHP be able to keep up with traffic? Probably, as much as Perl can.
Would PHP be faster than Perl? Of course not.
Would PHP require less memory than Perl? I don't know. I've heard it would.
Would PHP make it more maintanable and expandable by other people? If those people knew PHP better than Perl, yes. If they knew Perl better than PHP, no. "Maintainability" is a function of good programming practices, not language. My Perl programs and modules are far more maintainable than a lot of C, C++, Python, and PHP code out there. And there are far less maintainable than others of the same languages. The language is mostly irrelevant in this respect.
And in that line of thought, objectively speaking, it is a clear fact that moving to PHP would make Slash less maintainable, since the developers working on the project know and like Perl a lot better.
This stupid PHP advocacy is about as useful and as interesting as BSD vs. Linux. If you like PHP, use it. I don't give a damn. But don't try to make me feel silly or stupid or wrong for using Perl, just so you can feel better about your personal decision to use PHP. It won't work. I am proud to use Perl, and love it, and the best emotion you can get out of me is pity, not because you are using a language I feel to be less useful and interesting and mature, but because you have little better to do with your time.
So where do we report "Slashdot-specific" errata? (Score:2)
Sometimes I notice bugs that do not seem to be in the Slashcode per se, but seem to be affecting Slashdot alone. Often these are not consistent ongoing bugs, but transient, lasting 1-3 days.
One example: one weekend, my BBC Science slashbox was filled with VA/Linux corporate links instead of articles. The problem was reproducible (on my account at least) from different machines.
I realize this may be due to changes and updating (both software and hardware), but I am of the opinion that 'bugs don'f fix themselves'. I have reported a few to slashcode, but clearly this was some sort of config error at
Also, it took me quite a bit of searching before I was moderately confident that Slashcode was the place to go. This should be in the FAQ, or better, be a separate entry in the upper left corner, along with FAQ, privacy, submit story, etc.
Slashdot: every responsible site needs a good site specific bug reporting mechanism! How would you feel about *any* company that linked you to the BBS software manufacturer, under the presumption that the underlying code may be flawed but their own site implementation and administration was perfect?
No one knows better that
_____________
Re:Suggestions for discussion (Score:1)
Sorry, no can do because of a little database principle known as "referential integrity." Let me explain: the comments are threaded, so if you remove your comment and I have replied to it, where's my comment supposed to link to? Nowhere, so it's orphaned. The practical effect is that if I posted a comment and didn't like how the commentary below mine went, I could orphan an entire thread. Similarly, deleting a moderated post would orphan the "moderations" done to the record.
However, the idea could be improved by saying "allow a user to delete his/her own unmoderated post if it has no other comments linked to it." Without diving back into the v1.03 code base, I'm not sure if it is possible or if the folks at /. would like to implement your suggestion, but as with everything else -- it has to be done with alot of though as to to other effects.
Re:Meta-moderation in 1.0.3? (Score:1)
But for your amusement, I went over myself to find it. Look here [sourceforge.net].
Re:So where do we report "Slashdot-specific" errat (Score:3)
And yeah, I suppose this should be somewhere on the site in a FAQ or something. I just mentioned it to CowboyNeal.
Plain Old Text (Score:2)
You know, like not processing tags and not removing anything that looks like a tag?
(Previewing, I see now that it has just somehow been swapped with the "Extrans" option.)
Re:Suggestion (Score:2)
This information is available today. If you click on the #cid of a comment, it shows a breakdown of the moderation so far.
But it would be nice if this information were part of the header of each comment on the main page.
Re:If... (Score:1)
Ofcourse a Perl expert is faster with Perl, and a PHP expert is faster with PHP.
But, since I asked about a rewrite from scratch, I could imagine there would be more people who can follow PHP than follow Perl, because PHP is (simulair) to C.
right / wrong ? (not starting a flamewar here, just asking for oppionions
Re:If... (Score:3)
Given these, let's look at PHP/MySQL. You've got the web server, PHP, Zend, the Zend Optimizer, the PHP application, the database driver, the database server and the database itself.
That's a lot of components, and a LOT of overhead in lines of code. And that means lots of bugs.
IMHO, the only conclusion I can reach is that, if I were to write a Slash-like system, I would start by throwing out the web server. It doesn't really DO anything for you, it just copies data from one place to another. A 4 or 5 line program could do that. That gives you enormous speed-up (by freeing up RAM as well as by having a much faster server).
After the webserver, I'd have to throw out the database. Each URL points to a unique entry, so I can just as easily use sparse arrays and hashing. A database is just wasted overhead.
That leaves PHP, Zend and the Zend optimizer. Since the rest is now direct, in-line code, you're better off with C. This removes 3 packages and 5 interfaces, all of which would rip out yet more bugs.
In the end, the entire Slash/Perl|PHP/DB/httpd gumph, with the potential for a huge number of security holes and other assorted bugs, could be replaced by a much smaller, specialised C app that did everything.
(In practice, I doubt anyone'd ever want to write such an app. The Unix practice of reusable components has proven good enough, to the point that everything is done that way, now, even if for any given task, it's horribly inefficient and very prone to errors.)
Re:Plain Old Text (Score:1)
Exttrans was designed to take its place; it prints what you put in there, after "fixing" your < and > and & to be < and > and &.
Re:feature suggestions (Score:2)
Correct, but the problem with XSL is that it is somewhat of a proc hog when run server-side, as you have to re-purpose your pages for each user. While you have to do this anyway for custom pages on /., they don't usually do this by browser.
I like XSL, but it would appear to be a zero sum gain over HTML4.1Transitional(or XHTML) and CSS.
Re:If... (Score:1)
And maybe PHP is similar to C, but so is Perl. And far more people know Perl than PHP. So I don't see how you could say more people can follow PHP than Perl. If you are talking about ugly, poorly written Perl, then I suppose more people could good PHP than ugly Perl. And more people could follow good Perl than ugly PHP. And more people could folllow good Perl than good PHP, since few people know PHP, compared to those that know Perl.
Honestly, are you just fishing for someone to say that PHP is clearly, without a doubt, a better choice for such a project? It is not going to happen from any reasonable person. And it is not going to be the case that a reasonable person is going to say that Perl is clearly, without a doubt, a better choice. Many factors come into it. In this case, Perl is the better choice because of many factors, some of which have to do with the language, some of which have to do with the people involved. Get different people, and you might get a different answer. And in the end, if you can get the job done, then why does it matter?
Re:So fix it! (Score:1)
2. I keep forgetting that slashcode is up on SourceForge. My bad.
3. I'm sick of general "your code sucks" comments too. I see them all the time. Constructive comments are good. Specific comments are good. "Slashdot bites" is a troll that I shouldn't have responded to, but hey, what's done is done.
Re:feature suggestions (Score:2)
Of course, somebody will need to re-write the templates for /. and some of the validators. One problem: all of the templates use upper-case elements, and suffer from a severe "quote-lack", since even numbers need to be quoted. Most of the empty elements do not have a trailing />. A lot of the code validates out any element with a /> ending.
These things do not make it impossible to redo Slashdot, just darnde difficult.
Re:What did you do with CmdrTaco?! (Score:1)
KEEP CmdrTaco IN PRISON please.
Will it work? ;)
Re:need to account for people with high karma (Score:1)
Edit Comments [slashdot.org] -- do not display scores. Check it. Don't worry about karma, unless you go negative. Then create a new account.
This site has become such a troll pit, if you even think about posting something without a score bonus (which is usually useless on the second tier of comments) some ac will waste /.'s resources to tell you that you are a karma whore. I usually check no +1 because I don't think my comment needs to be above another's. If that's whoring then I am a whore.
Re:"overrated" needed for automatic +1 (Score:1)
People who get the +1 can post a comment without the +1 by checking a box. This is a good thing to do if the message is not particularly informative, insightful, interesting, funny, etc. People who post mediocre comments at a score of 2 deserve to get an "overrated" moderation.
This is most certainly true in most respects. If I respond to a tier 1 message or lower, the +1 comes off. I only use +2 if I make a big post, write about a subject I like, or post at the top level after 100+ posts have been made. Something could be said for selective use of this feature. I think, however, that it should read "Score +1 bonus" and the check specifically turns it on. That may help curb the problem.
Re:Does it serve properly yet? (Score:1)
Aargh! That little green gif is the main reason I run in lite mode! The image server should have this, the most popular image on /. cached by now. Then again, it doesn't add to the visual style one iota, so I even question the need for its existence.
ps. it is better with the new servers, I can now use regular mode again.
Re:What About Ad Rotation? (Score:1)
Be not ashamed. The DB Libraries in most *nicies use esentially flat files to store one key/value pair. So does tie in perl. I don't think this is much of a programming sin. A programming sin would be to Write a complex structure for something that is simple in real life. It may not be too "organized" in a plain format file, but at least it is usually human-readable. Pack and unpack are elegant for this particular use as well.
Please no CSS (Score:2)
Re:Does it serve properly yet? (Score:2)
At home on a 56k (Freeserve, UK) link it would go through fine.
I thought that the banner ads were hanging the page load, because UUNET had poor routing to the banner ad sites.
In my new company (AT&T line) slashdot loads just great.
It might also have something to do with the fact that Slashdot has been completely revamped over recent weeks.
Feature Request ;-) (Score:1)
How about having a mode where posts of different scores are given different shades of grey... score 5 would be bold and black, score 0 a barely readable light grey and score -1 white! We could tell at a glance how high a score a post has. (Perhaps we could even have flamebait in red?). Yes, I know this is silly.
Score -1, stupid.
Question for Pudge (Score:2)
Re:Meta-moderation in 1.0.3? (Score:1)
Anomalous: inconsistent with or deviating from what is usual, normal, or expected
Re:feature suggestions (Score:2)
You can use XSL/whatever-transformations-you-desire to spit it out as HTML (or XHTML) from the server side today
I know this. For the last twelve months, I've worked on little else. Trust me, that's not a good choice for building any Slashcode version in the "near future".
Similarly, neither is client side XML. You can get away with that on msdn.microsoft.com/xml/, where you know anyone connecting is going to understand the issue, even if they are using a non-IE browser. You'd have to be pretty brave though to try it in the Linux-loving mosh-pit of Slashdot !
Re:If... (Score:2)
Keep the number of daemons/threads BELOW OR EQUAL to the number of CPUs.
I suppose by this you mean that the number of daemons/threads SPAWNED from a single user request keeps at n-1 in relationship to the processor. At my Concentric-hosted site, I have to keep it under 1 thread per script or it will kproc me. That isn't so bad, since it keeps me from doing stupid things like globbing massive directories and the like when I can just do an opendir/readdir and run the results through grep. I take up one read that way.
Given these, let's look at PHP/MySQL. You've got the web server, PHP, Zend, the Zend Optimizer, the PHP application, the database driver, the database server and the database itself.
Actually, on one server I work with PHP and Apache are compiled against each other, we don't use Zend, and the MySQL can't be helped. However, it is nice in the fact that our editors don't need to worry about setting up the ODBC every time, or even writing out headers every time, as php does a lot of this for you. It already knows where mysql is and so on.
On my personal site, I use perl. I use it because:
it's on almost every server out there.
It's mostly backend stuff, and
It is a programmer's language, and not just a programming language. Larry thinks about how hard it would be to progrom something, and adds functions accordingly.
IMHO, the only conclusion I can reach is that, if I were to write a Slash-like system, I would start by throwing out the web server.
If you wanted to get really technical, you don't even need a webserver. You could do the whole thing through text in a telnet session like a mud or a old-fashioned bbs. You can even write your own caching and load-balancing software to keep it up. But you don't have to. There is already a framework in place to do this. In fact the next Linux kernel will have khttpd, and you won't even need a webserver unless you want to do dynamic content. Then the program you mentioned above would be quite nice. As above so below.
(In practice, I doubt anyone'd ever want to write such an app. The Unix practice of reusable components has proven good enough, to the point that everything is done that way, now, even if for any given task, it's horribly inefficient and very prone to errors.)
In essence, a lot of the programs mentioned in your post already are quite debugged, and checked for security by the "thousands of eyes" looking over the code. Your proposition would only be safe if you followed in their footsteps and copied their code. However, You could just use their software and save yourself the trouble. Why build the cow when you can run the milk for free? <ducks>
Re:"overrated" needed for automatic +1 (Score:3)
Anomalous: inconsistent with or deviating from what is usual, normal, or expected
Re:Suggestions for discussion (Score:1)
Anomalous: inconsistent with or deviating from what is usual, normal, or expected
Re:"overrated" needed for automatic +1 (Score:1)
I think that the check box should be used to get your' +1, i.e. the default is the normal posting level and, furthermore, that your karma should go down by 1 for each +1 bonus you give yourself.
Wow! You hit the nail right on the head! That would be a perfect solution! you'd have to spend your karma to get a bonus. That way everyone over 2 can get a +1 message, but it will cost them. Now to go about diffing it... It would include changes to the global config, the posting system and some user display (to finally tell you what you got +1 on) for this to work.
Thanks! (Score:1)
Re:feature suggestions (-1, Redundant, -1, Redunda (Score:1)
It could be done, of course. But it would be a bit of work with a good graphics library.
Re:Meta-moderation in 1.0.3? (Score:1)
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Re:Question for Pudge (Score:1)
Re:Here is the code that's really bad (Score:2)
Re:Does it serve properly yet? (Score:1)
I only mentioned this in the first place because it doesnt just seem like normal loss:
I never have any icmp loss; and the HTTP requests always connects immediately --- but no data ever comes. It's not as if it loads slowly or loads part of the code, there's nothing.
Sometimes it will time out, but sometimes I get a server error page (not a browser error) 301 or 312, saying that the page did not exist or something.
This is usually around the wee hours of the morning, in American time, btw.
It only happened since the server upgrade.
Re:Suggestions for discussion (Score:2)
This way, nobody would be able to actually "erase" a comment, but foolish or accidental posts could be painlessly swatted down by their authors.
Re:Here is the code that's really bad (Score:1)
So now I'm a troll (Score:1)
Thanks again! (Score:2)
Thanks for releasing your CGI code, and double thanks for getting the running code and the public source in sync.
I was one of the more annoyingly whiny complainers before the 0.9 slash release; here's hoping that now that both the slash code and school are out I can do something with it this summer..
Re:So now I'm a troll (Score:1)
Slasdhot Code annoyances (Score:1)
I'm going to refuse to moderate from now on because of its negative effect on my karma.
Re:Suggestions for discussion (Score:2)
I actually think this is a great idea for 'removing' posts in general, except it fails to solve the only real reason I (for one) would ever want to see a post removed, and that's if it violated some sort of law (again, the example being the Microsoft letter). Moderating it down still allows it to be in the system, which could eventually be a legal hassle. I know there are logical referential reasons why posts can't just *poof*, but allowing the user to replace his post with message (sort of away thing), either a [ this post has been deleted ] or more personalized [ I have been asked by greedy corporate lawyers to remove this post or be sued. Their address is so contact them. ] message could solve both problems as well as inform. Obviously, only registered accounts would qualify; ACs could fall under the jurisdiction of Slashdot. Also, I think this should come with a heavy karma penalty, because self-censorship affects others. Allowing others to mark their posts down without penalty could lead to the removal of some very insightful threads from the common discussion.
Just like you can put up an offensive or illegal sign in a community park, you should also be able to take it down and put a conciliatory or explanatory note back up in its place.
Re:What did you do with CmdrTaco?! (Score:2)
crontabs are being edited across the land as we speak...
Re:Here is the code that's really bad (Score:2)
Re:Plain Old Text (Score:2)
I believe that was a bug, but it was a useful one