Second, no comments means no opportunity to give feedback, even of the writing variety.
I’ve actually received a lot of feedback on that piece both in email and on twitter.
(The typo in the third sentence didn’t help either.)
Well if it didn’t have embarrassing typos how would anyone know it was written by me? ;) I’ve actually had cowriters scold me on several errors in that piece and I would have corrected it earlier this week but I’ve been working with very limited computer access in the past three months. Trying to edit articles in wordpress on my smartphone is a nightmare so I put it off until today when I finally got a home computer again and more importantly installed a spellchecker.
Do you guys really think writing with no feedback is a good idea? (Requiring emails for comments is a deadly trivial inconvenience. You’ll end up only getting feedback from the loudest people, which doesn’t seem to correlate at all with the most useful feedback.)
There are the open threads. But this is a policy we may change in the future, I’m particularly interested in how James’ new approach will work out in the following weeks. What do you think of it?
I’ve actually received a lot of feedback on that piece both in email and on twitter.
Well if it didn’t have embarrassing typos how would anyone know it was written by me? ;) I’ve actually had cowriters scold me on several errors in that piece and I would have corrected it earlier this week but I’ve been working with very limited computer access in the past three months. Trying to edit articles in wordpress on my smartphone is a nightmare so I put it off until today when I finally got a home computer again and more importantly installed a spellchecker.
There are the open threads. But this is a policy we may change in the future, I’m particularly interested in how James’ new approach will work out in the following weeks. What do you think of it?
James hasn’t had much success with it by the looks of it, (only one person got through last I checked) but I certainly like the idea.
On the other hand, curated email exchanges are neat too.
If no comments is acceptable, some comments is better, and free comments is unacceptable, one comment sounds like it might be pretty good.
Huh. This surprises me. Fair enough.