I appreciate all the hard work you have done, Marcello, and I appreciate all the hard work of everyone involved in the list, including the hard hardware work of Bill Mahoney. People like Bill are often the unsung heroes and heroines of all the analyses analysts conduct and present. And, I appreciate that change is inevitable.
That said, I will sound a, hmm, how to put it--a less than celebratory note about the new forum format.
I just registered, and perhaps it will grow on me. I think it probably will not. I find it a bit . . . incongruous.
On the one hand, massive computer storage capability and amazingly advanced search capability together render "organizing" material completely unnecessary--at least, the poor organization humans do. Google is one of the most, if not THE most successful companies on the planet. And their core product, the door through which 90 percent of their customers originally entered, is a simple square box in which one can type anything a keyboard allows and some things a keyboard does not (e.g., images), and the magic of google will bring--without ANY human categorization effort--relevant material to one's screen.
This is how the retiring statalist worked, especially the archives--no one needed to categorize anything. The text itself was the source for search engines.
Now, with the "advance" of the forum, instead of mining the steadily growing stockpile of information, people are supposed to "tag" their posts and, more important, place them in the appropriate collection: 1)general, 2)mata, 3)how the forum works, and 4)sandpile, er, uh, I mean box. Why? We can see the problems with this approach already.
First, there have *already* been mis-classifications, which would seem to increase the work for someone (or, eventually, it will be very tough to find the relevant material). It is unclear whether and how such misclassifications will be corrected.
Second, many postings combine material--this is the way of work, and human thought, and cannot be easily eradicated (without prohibitive costs in intelligibility, if it is even possible).
Third, navigability has already been questioned. The solution is for forum users to set up stuff on their browser. Again, why? Just to get the functionality old statalist had for someone arriving the very first time? This is progress?
Again, I completely understand the need to retire equipment, and thank those who managed aging equipment as long as they did. I am truly grateful.
I just wonder--why do we reinvent the wheel and call it progress, when, instead of a 360-degree round rolling object we now have a kludgy object that has two straight sides attached to one long curve. It does not roll. It does not rest. It does not work as well as what we had before. Why don't we just move the wheel that works to a new platform?
Anyway, maybe experience will help me see and feel this as an advance. But, judging from many other "advances," I can say--it is quite possible that most will experience a loss of functionality, and, while they may accept it (because they appreciate the hard work of those who run it day-in and day-out, and there is no clear alternative), it will reduce the utility of the resource for them.
Respectfully (and, apologies for cross-posting to statalist.old and statalist.org)
Sam
That said, I will sound a, hmm, how to put it--a less than celebratory note about the new forum format.
I just registered, and perhaps it will grow on me. I think it probably will not. I find it a bit . . . incongruous.
On the one hand, massive computer storage capability and amazingly advanced search capability together render "organizing" material completely unnecessary--at least, the poor organization humans do. Google is one of the most, if not THE most successful companies on the planet. And their core product, the door through which 90 percent of their customers originally entered, is a simple square box in which one can type anything a keyboard allows and some things a keyboard does not (e.g., images), and the magic of google will bring--without ANY human categorization effort--relevant material to one's screen.
This is how the retiring statalist worked, especially the archives--no one needed to categorize anything. The text itself was the source for search engines.
Now, with the "advance" of the forum, instead of mining the steadily growing stockpile of information, people are supposed to "tag" their posts and, more important, place them in the appropriate collection: 1)general, 2)mata, 3)how the forum works, and 4)sandpile, er, uh, I mean box. Why? We can see the problems with this approach already.
First, there have *already* been mis-classifications, which would seem to increase the work for someone (or, eventually, it will be very tough to find the relevant material). It is unclear whether and how such misclassifications will be corrected.
Second, many postings combine material--this is the way of work, and human thought, and cannot be easily eradicated (without prohibitive costs in intelligibility, if it is even possible).
Third, navigability has already been questioned. The solution is for forum users to set up stuff on their browser. Again, why? Just to get the functionality old statalist had for someone arriving the very first time? This is progress?
Again, I completely understand the need to retire equipment, and thank those who managed aging equipment as long as they did. I am truly grateful.
I just wonder--why do we reinvent the wheel and call it progress, when, instead of a 360-degree round rolling object we now have a kludgy object that has two straight sides attached to one long curve. It does not roll. It does not rest. It does not work as well as what we had before. Why don't we just move the wheel that works to a new platform?
Anyway, maybe experience will help me see and feel this as an advance. But, judging from many other "advances," I can say--it is quite possible that most will experience a loss of functionality, and, while they may accept it (because they appreciate the hard work of those who run it day-in and day-out, and there is no clear alternative), it will reduce the utility of the resource for them.
Respectfully (and, apologies for cross-posting to statalist.old and statalist.org)
Sam
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