I am attempting to understand the complete picture of Service Broker external activation. I have found bits and pieces of different aspects, but nothing that is a complete simple sample. Can anyone point me to one?
Close vote for asking for external resources is what I'd go for. The minimal understanding when asking for code could also work, but I'd not choose that one here.
If I'm not mistaken @LaszloPapp there is even a delay between them downvoting someone, losing the rep for it, and that becoming apparent in their overall reputation for other users.
Even then you'd have to suspect the user, have their reputation at hand, and notice the reputation drop, hoping it's not caused by a vote other than the one you expect them to have cast
Sure. But you'll have noticed that privileges come on a scale. A lot of the basic cleanup can be done by lower-rep users. I can do plenty of "moderation" tasks on SO with my measly 8k
@Bart Caveat: you can infer a user's reputation loss by comparing their historical reputation scores from the global reputation graph on StackExchange.com. If you have a specific set of votes that you suspect came from a particular user, this can be used to verify that they cast those votes in some cases.
Honestly I don't understand the issue here.. the C++ lounge people are pretty much assholes, but they're also very valuable members of the community and the only reason that they're assholes is that people don't barge into the chat every day and waste their time... If they could enforce access control better it wouldn't be a problem, but they can't.
Some of the regulars in the lounge c++ room are really contributing and valued people here.. so they told a new guy to GTFO their room. I don't see the big deal about it.
@BenjaminGruenbaum We're not assholes. We're actually pretty open, but all these entitled asshats we've never seen before rushing in to ask questions and acting like we owe them something are enough to make us a bit bitter.
@Xeo @EtiennedeMartel You come off as very aggressive to new users - but I don't find that a huge problem because overall the room members make a contribution to the site and it's a community, you don't have to be nice to new guys imo. Access control sucks and sometimes you act like assholes to new people.
@EtiennedeMartel I'm saying that even if you come off as aggressive in order to maintain the quality of your room because access control is very problematic - that's ok, because there is no real alternative to avoid spam/trolls, even if you miss a good user every now and then I can totally see how it's worth it.
Maybe we should define "aggressive" first. I don't think binning an off-topic / help-vampire message counts as aggressive. And that's really what we do most of the time.
@Jordan I don't know if what you said happened really happened, but reading through the transcripts I can't help but wonder if you shouldn't just leave at some point.
@Jordan And you - If you feel like you were not treated with respect you can leave the conversation at any point, you came to a room, they were not nice or useful - leave. You're going into a new community with their own etiquette, if you were insulted - that's not ok but you chose to stay.
There's also a way to ignore users in chat, so if you feel someone's harassing you but you don't want to switch rooms, you can toss them on your ignore list.
@Jordan No one wants you to have a bad experience here and I apologize if you were offended by these people - but you have to try and see where they're coming from. I suggest that next time if you feel like you're not treated with respect just leave the environment which you find hostile. You can always invite people to your own room.
@BenjaminGruenbaum I don't know if I'd call that "it doesn't work". I personally don't tend to ignore people in chat (partly because it's literally my job to be able to read everything), but to me, a disjointed conversation > reading stuff aimed at me that's making my blood boil.
For the record, though, I don't care what the context is or who's at fault or whatever, telling someone to go kill themselves is never appropriate. Do report that sort of thing.
@AnnaLear We have moderators that are part of our community in JS, so a very effective community built bot (by our beloved Zirak) and the mods take care of junk pretty efficiently. Ignoring however, provides a very negative user experience, just like flagging in the chat.
@BenjaminGruenbaum Yeah, chat flagging is rather badly broken. I need to get back to figuring out a way to fix it or at least make it somewhat more useful.
@AnnaLear Yeah, to be completely honest I don't blame you - while the big chat rooms contribute and moderate a lot of the questions in their tags compared to their size (C++ in the C++ tag, JS in the JS tag and PHP in the PHP tag (they're doing a great job btw)), I can see how from a business perspective it's better for SE to focus on the main site.
@BenjaminGruenbaum It might be a good idea to change ignores to be "soft", i.e. just displaying messages from ignored users in a smaller font and/or grayed out. Similar to ignored tags. That would preserve context but still make annoying people less annoying (to those ignoring them) - could probably be done easily with a userscript
I've wasted most of the day listening to countless sound clips, searching for a good set of distinctive-yet-unobtrusive aural indicators... And at long last, I think I have the perfect mix:
Message on idle room: Wilhelm scream
Message on active room:Wilhelm scream
Mention on active room:Wilhelm...
I feel my suggestions were rejected without due consideration, but... Whatever.
I have table in which one column has xml data, so the column type is blob. When i try to retrieve using java by jdbc. I can extract but when i print it show the content as non-readable format. What should i do for getting the proper xml from table?
my code
try {
// Executing the s...
Actually, if I wait five minutes to do another edit (perhaps a minor one), would it be able to to be reviewed again? (I did edit the most recent revision)