I can't speak for everyone, but I highly value the contributions of all
users, from the anons making their first tentative edits, to vandal
patrollers, article writers, cleanup task forces, and yes, even the devs.
Without so much help, surely the wiki wouldn't be around, or wouldn't be
nearly as successful. Not to mention, the devs are some of our most
particularly skilled volunteers -- and we all are *volunteers*.
I've assumed the new numbers (I'm not sure what to call them) were wrapped
in a div or span to make them friendly to CSS customization. From there on,
if a user doesn't like them, they're free to change the colors, text
decoration, or anything else, or even just make them disappear. As is
frequently the case with open source projects, if you don't like something,
you're usually free to *fix it*.
...and if you don't know how, at least have the sense to complain
productively. Good feedback is hard to come by; I've always been of the
opinion that the internet has an awfully high "signal to noise" ratio,
almost like finding a needle in a haystack.
On the bright side, I see this as an excellent chance to teach a few people
how to play with their custom CSS options.
I like the numbers. Long live new features.
-Luna
On 12/30/06, Rob Church <robchur(a)gmail.com> wrote:
[This is in response to all the bitching and whining that's taken
place since December 24th, on mailing lists, bug trackers, village
pumps and sleazy little back-alley forums...I apologise for the
crossposting. As ever, please feel free to forward this to other
appropriate parties or lists, but keep responses and/or discussion on
one.]
All right, this bickering has gone far enough. The fact of the matter
is that we're under constant pressure to keep the site alive and
introduce new features and fixes on a regular basis. I can well
understand that a lot of people will object to each change, and we do
our best to make things non-intrusive.
When this feature was first introduced, some bright spark on the
English Wikipedia edited the global CSS and made the numbers bright,
garish green and red, and emboldened them - I didn't agree with that,
but whatever. However, there were a huge number of not-too-polite
complaints blaming us for doing it, and some of these failed to
subside when it was pointed out that this had nothing to do with the
development team.
We might not implement their letter, but the spirit of the ideas of
keeping civil and assuming good faith *are* applied at the development
level; we just reserve the right to be blunt. If I've been
particularly rude to anyone over this issue, I do apologise for it -
and I'm sure anyone else who may have been apologises too.
If we're to implement certain tweaks for this in user preferences,
then we need some co-operation from the user base to allow us time to
determine a clean means of doing so (we want to avoid duplication of
code when generating changes list items), and we want people to
remember that politeness goes both ways.
Just because user A dislikes a feature, it doesn't mean that user B
will, and it is not fair to scream and rant and rave over it because
we tried to implement something that was useful. I would like to note
also that the numbers, as with the "minor edit" flag, and the whole
concept of edit summaries, are advisory - what we provide is a factual
statement of who changed what, and how much they changed, and we allow
that user to present justification for their changes. If that user
chose to lie in their edit summary, or deliberately mis-labelled a
minor edit, then there is nothing any of us can do - and you (the
users) have coped with that well enough over (at least) the past four
years or so.
I will open a fresh feature request, giving an opportunity for Brion
to say "yes" or "no" definitively, and I will avail myself to Leon
or
anyone else who would then wish to implement the outcome should they
want any input.
I point-blank refuse, however, to work with any user who feels that it
is acceptable to assume bad faith on the part of the development team.
That attitude could very well lose you a lot of the behind-the-scenes
supporting cast one day, without whom you wouldn't even *have* a
website.
Rob Church
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