(Aug. 19, 2008 4:34 AM)Train Wrote: I was under the impression the rep system was for people to know who had quality knowledge about the hobby to offer and who didn't. The whole system seems misleading to me.
How many of this gullible newbies do you think will actually notice this rep thing, and figure out what's going on? For the large majority, either they'll completely not notice it at all, or they'll notice, and find out enough to be able to see the comments and realize it's about who's nice and who's not.
Furthermore, for those who receive good rep due to comments, it so happens that they generally coincide with helpfulness and knowledge and so on. Likewise, for those who receive bad rep, they generally do not contribute as much. To a large extent, I would also say that the exceptions who have good rep but do not contribute well do not actually post much in the Beyblading section, thus we can ignore their rep when talking about helpfulness since this would NEVER COME INTO QUESTION.
Concerning this "quality knowledge to offer", if you pay attention to the style of discussion in this forum, to a large extent, we find that most opinions are unanimous, and when they're not, it's open to debate to such an extent that everyone's opinion is generally quite equal. So, I doubt we'll ever be having cases in which the better opinion is rejected because the poster has lower rep.
(Aug. 19, 2008 2:16 PM)Train Wrote: As for me changing my name it shouldn't matter. People don't know me because I'm not a memorable person. I've met Brad 5 seperate times at conventions as well as Elliot and neither has remembered meeting me at any of these. You're not the only one that doesn't know a lot about me.
I thought you were a new member until I read this thread.
(Aug. 19, 2008 2:16 PM)Train Wrote: If you read my edit I did say Brad did deserve a higher rep simply because of his involvement in the Japanese community his knowledge of the game and anime and for creating sites such as these, but by that logical people like Kai-V and Nic should also have sky high reps because of all of their knowledge. His rep should be higher no doubt, but it's in a ridiculous size at the moment compared to other large contributors.
I'm not sure about Kai-V, her helpful-post-count seems almost on par with Brad, but if you consider the difference in the number of helpful posts that Brad makes as compared to that I make... the proportions for the rep seems about right. And for Kai-V, I would think that her area of expertise is more towards new trends, while Brad spends more time helping new members with their current equipment. Of course, Brad would have a large amount of rep.
(Aug. 19, 2008 2:16 PM)Train Wrote: This is coming off as a personal attack on me unintentionally simply because I seem to be the only one having this problem with the rep system. Everyone here defends everyone else because of the longevity of their relationships with one another. I don't have an issue with any of that it's just me pointing out a fact.
I almost never talk to anyone on this board, just for the record.
But anyway, I'm glad that you brought this up. Rep system is highly volatile and difficult to manage on forums; this discussion is important for development.
(Aug. 19, 2008 2:16 PM)Train Wrote: I would be contributing a lot more if I didn't have to work as much as I do. I simply cannot respond to questions or write an article because I'm never around with questions and other people answer faster. As for the articles I'd rather not run off something half-assed and put my name on it. I would want to take time to write it and do a decent job of it which I simply cannot do.
Honestly, I would think my case is worse. I'm in a completely different time zone, so I'm never online when action happens. I'm too occupied with academics to write articles. But I try to help wherever I can, if anything pops up. I'm posting to this board after finishing up some calculations and before sleeping, and I think if I can do this, you probably can too.