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Not a bad thought, but...
I'm not sure it'll make much difference, since a poster would have to actually read these "posting etiquette" guidelines. Many of the principles are already covered in "Acceptable Use" policy, though I suppose we could add some tips if the community thought it would help.
I'm not sure it would have helped in the case of the discussion you are referring too. If you start a discussion off on the wrong foot and then get mad at people's reaction its pretty hard to recover.
OK, before we go too far down a road here... let's make sure this discussion stays on topic and, in the spirit of Joseph's original post, constructive. Insulting any members of this community, new or old, will not be tolerated.
I do think the key in keeping these discussions fruitful is just remembering why we're here... to share coffee knowledge and help build a better barista community.
What new members need to remember is that this is not a helpdesk. None of us are paid to be here answering questions. We spend our limited free time here for a variety of reasons, but mostly to learn from each other and help each other out.
You get what you give here... sometimes more, sometimes less. We've all had times when we've offended each other and gotten the response you'd expect. Kinda the nature of human interaction, no?
Reggie, speaking to your specific discussion... yes, there was quite a bit of snark in many of the responses to your original post. If you could read it again from our eyes, I think you'd see that a little snark was justified? Surely you can see that?
To your question, the part I personally found way more offensive than your original post was that you got LOTS of on topic feedback, yet chose to focus only on the snark with your followup posts. Even now. Members of this community collectively spent hours sharing advice with you, and you didn't even acknowledge that. So you asked a question in a bit of a (intentionally or unintentionally) rude fashion, got a bunch of on-topic answers as well as smacked around a bit, got pissed off for being smacked around, and insulted everybody. Not cool.
This leads to my big tip for new posters...
If you get useful responses to your question, please acknowledge the people that took the time to do so, then follow up to let us know if it helped.
Way too many times, people join this community, ask one or two questions, get good feedback, then leave. With a couple of exceptions, we never find out if that tip fixed the problem. We never know if you got that job. We never know if your store successfully opened. Kinda gets old after a while... We are a community, not a helpdesk.
I hope this has been constructive, that was my intention.
Brady,
Very good point. It's my hope through a discussion/discussions like this we can prevent "getting off on the wrong foot" and help people new to this forum understand the basic's of being very clear about our individual experience and what we would like to learn with our very clearly worded question/topic.
Joe
Brady said:Not a bad thought, but...
I'm not sure it'll make much difference, since a poster would have to actually read these "posting etiquette" guidelines. Many of the principles are already covered in "Acceptable Use" policy, though I suppose we could add some tips if the community thought it would help.
I'm not sure it would have helped in the case of the discussion you are referring too. If you start a discussion off on the wrong foot and then get mad at people's reaction its pretty hard to recover.
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