Posts with the most experience

Why? Aren't you the least bit interested to know what sort of stuff people have been marking? And how does that have anything at all to do with how you regard them?

Possibly because posts that are funny tend to get more experience points than those with high analytic or creative value (with some exceptions, of course). It's understandable that people who like to gain XP for the latter would find this disheartening.
 

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Why? Aren't you the least bit interested to know what sort of stuff people have been marking? And how does that have anything at all to do with how you regard them?

I feel like I get a good feel just by reading posts on a regular basis as to what gets marked up with XP and what doesn't. Just from that it seems pretty arbitrary as to what folks give bonus XP for and what they don't.

I think the XP has been a neat little feature, but not to be taken too seriously.
 

Possibly because posts that are funny tend to get more experience points than those with high analytic or creative value (with some exceptions, of course).
And you know this how? Without what jonesy is asking for, no one knows what gets more xp.

Bullgrit
 

Possibly because posts that are funny tend to get more experience points than those with high analytic or creative value (with some exceptions, of course)...

This is true, but I don't see it as a problem. And honestly, with the limitations on XP (have to give it out to a certain number of people before giving it to someone again), I think it gets mitiagated quite a bit. Without that, the "funny" posts would just be drowned in XP comments. But you're right, funny and controversial posts do get an inordinate amount of XP compared to thoughtful, analytical, and creative posts.

I think it evens out the cosmic karmic balance for comedy though. Especially as Comedy is so underrepresented by the American Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences.;)
 

Don't.

Experience comments (esp. since the comments have been introduced) are really not highly correlative to the quality of posts.

Bye
Thanee

I know. I was kidding.

Actually, I think this sort of thing could be kind of interesting. While many posts, as some mentioned above are simply given XP because they are humourous or whatnot, others are given XP because people believe they add value to a certain topic.

Listing top XP posts and allowing each person to determine which are interesting and which are simply comedic, people might be able to find a lot of interesting posts/threads that they wouldn't have noticed ordinarily because maybe they aren't in a forum they check frequently or something.

Or not. Without doing this, no one will know if this may be valuable or not.
 

To clarify what I meant: In my experience (haha, I made a pun), it seems that while some helpful, thoughtful, analytical, etc... type posts do get a lot of xp, many of the ones that get extended significantly by comment boxes are either joke posts or flaming / borderline flaming attack posts. Maybe that's not the case and my perception's skewed by the threads I look at. If it is the case, that's why I'd find it disheartening, because (to me at least...) it wouldn't say much for the site.

*preparing to be told I’m wrong by everyone that replies to this*
 

And you know this how? Without what jonesy is asking for, no one knows what gets more xp.

I have mountains of anecdotal evidence, and even more stipulation and surmising to back me up (not to mention plenty of guessing). You're going to need more than some easily manipulated statistics to convince me I'm wrong.
 

To clarify what I meant: In my experience (haha, I made a pun), it seems that while some helpful, thoughtful, analytical, etc... type posts do get a lot of xp, many of the ones that get extended significantly by comment boxes are either joke posts or flaming / borderline flaming attack posts. Maybe that's not the case and my perception's skewed by the threads I look at. If it is the case, that's why I'd find it disheartening, because (to me at least...) it wouldn't say much for the site.
This was the crux of an argument I made in Meta a while back: it seemed to me that my most XP-attractive posts were not the posts of which I was most proud.

It was my hope that making comments public would curb this a bit, but I'm not really sure if it has had that effect.

Cheers, -- N
 

Yes, funny posts attract exp. And as people find different kinds of things funny, the exp seems to go randomly to pretty much anything. But the constructive/deconstructive posts get the exact same treatment of seemingly random exp.

What I wanted to know was: how does this apply to the posts which get multiple people voting for them? And when I say multiple I do mean whole shedloads. Is it still seemingly random, or does the ratio turn one way or another?
 

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