vote up 3 vote down star

Seems to me all the rep-intensive questions have been taken. The popular ones all seem to be subjective and non-programming-related; and it would appear that the few who were here in the early days have the huge reputation and therefore they'll stay on top.

Let's face it, most of us are here to present and solve complex technical issues; but those aren't the questions that garner the most upvotes.

Don't believe me? Disagree? Take a look at the most popular questions:

The list goes on. So now I am left facing the question: Are there any supermassive questions left? Can there be a balance of some kind without hoping a dupe slips through the cracks? Must we resort to copypasta over to the IT/Sysadmin version?

flag

1  
All of the questions you referenced are community wikis - no rep there. – Andrew Hare Mar 27 at 3:23
This is a funny question. It only takes 2 weeks of good answers to get 2k rep. Yes, it will take you 3-5 months to get to 10k just like it took all the other 10k rep people. "Popular" questions don't give a ton of rep - there are lots of barriers preventing it – Adam Davis Mar 27 at 3:36
1  
So don't get discouraged. Answer what you can. Ask what you need to know, and let the good times flow. Reputation is an incentive, and does give additional options on the site, but it's not all it's cracked up to be. – Adam Davis Mar 27 at 3:37
1  
You don't get point representation of reputation from wiki questions (which this question should be as nobody should be provided rep for this question). You don't get good reputation as in name recognition by posting questions stating that you want point reputation, it's easier to be helpful. – Quintin Robinson Mar 27 at 3:40

closed as not programming related by Andrew Hare, sth, arul, Jon B, Quintin Robinson Mar 27 at 3:32

6 Answers

vote up 5 vote down check

If you look at the users with massive reputation, they answer a lot of questions, and/or post a lot of questions. Skeet has answered 15-16 questions a day for 6 months.

Sure, some of the gimme questions are gone that contributed, but if you're quick and have good knowledge, you can rise among the stars.

But you have to be fast because the community responds quickly (especially to questions that are popular (and likely to lend reputation)).

Of course, this question looks to be an attempt at boosting reputation. I'd better finish up quickly. :)

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

Well, this question certainly seems like a decent attempt :) (And by the way, I hope it works out great for you ... I take a win/win perspective to the whole rep thing).

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

I hope. As I'm a newbie with a reputation to prove it!

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

Spend some time programming and then you will come up with questions.

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

Well, as I see it, you're faced with two options. You can be a...

  1. Bounty Hunter
  2. Freakin' Genius

or... 3. Hack Jon Skeet's account and recommend all of your own answers

"It was the best of times, it was the blurst of times..."

link|flag
vote up 2 vote down

Regarding high rep users and high rep questions:

I don't think any of the big rep users owe their reputation nor bulk of their rep to some of those big rep questions. The high rep users provide high quality answers to countless questions to get the bulk of their rep.

If you are answering questions a lot every day you can earn at least 1k per week. This is possible whether or not you have high rep questions like you mentioned. And if you have a lot of accepted answers you can even get 2k rep every week.

Questions that earn high up-votes typically get those votes all in the same day. And in that case only the first 20 votes actually count. For the high rep users, they would have gotten at least 20 votes on other questions anyway.


Regarding the availability of questions:

There will always be more good questions (as well as high rep earning questions), as there will always be improvements and changes in the field of computer science.

There are at least 3 types of questions that I can think of on the top of my head, and for all of these 3 I do not see any of them ever running out of questions:

1) "I have this programaming problem, can you find out what it is for me?" This type of question will appear forever, as there are infinitely many different syntax errors and programming mistakes.

2) Questions that have some absolute objective answer.

3) Subjective, Opinions and comparisons of products and technologies.

link|flag

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.