I know this isn’t reddit or hacker news, but I wonder if their might be some value in having some basic link recommending/voting features. For instance people could suggest rationality related links (reading, videos, book recommendations) that aren’t at the level of an essay as most entries on this site seem to be. Perhaps this concept is inherent in the format that we have just not used much, i don’t know.
I raise this issue because listing TED links made me think of this recent pycon video with Alex Martelli that riffed on the near/far modes that has been discussed on OB/LW lately (I know he comments on OB occasionally).
Currently it seems like this sorts of links/votings only end up in comments of main entries. As another idea perhaps someone could start up a “rationality” subreddit.
I know this isn’t reddit or hacker news, but I wonder if their might be some value in having some basic link recommending/voting features. For instance people could suggest rationality related links (reading, videos, book recommendations) that aren’t at the level of an essay as most entries on this site seem to be. Perhaps this concept is inherent in the format that we have just not used much, i don’t know.
I raise this issue because listing TED links made me think of this recent pycon video with Alex Martelli that riffed on the near/far modes that has been discussed on OB/LW lately (I know he comments on OB occasionally).
Currently it seems like this sorts of links/votings only end up in comments of main entries. As another idea perhaps someone could start up a “rationality” subreddit.
We could create a group on http://friendfeed.com for that. That’s how groups on there tend to be used. e.g. http://friendfeed.com/googlebits and http://friendfeed.com/dslr
something like this?
http://friendfeed.com/lesswrong
just posting a link with a quick description as a top-level post is completely fine—people just don’t do it that much.