Re: Why a scoreboard?

2005-04-04 Thread Greg Matheson
Sorry for flattening out the level of the discussion, but ...

On Sun, 03 Apr 2005, Yitzchak Scott-Thoennes wrote:

> On Sat, Apr 02, 2005 at 10:43:57AM -0500, Ricardo SIGNES wrote:
> > * "David A. Golden" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [2005-04-02T05:27:18]
> > > Andy Lester wrote:
> > > >Why is there a scoreboard?  Why do we care about rankings?  Why is it
> > > >necessary to compare one measure to another?  What purpose is being
> > > >served?

> > > Why is there XP on perlmonks?  Or Karma on Slashdot?  Or for that 
> > > matter, why do we grade students' exams (particularly, why do we often 
> > > grade them on a curve)?

I'm a teacher but some of my students don't seem to care about
their grades :-( 

I try to make it game-like, with mixed results.

> > This is not a good analogy to Kwalitee, because XP and Karma are
> > primarily awarded by humans who can make judgements based on reason.

What about money as an analogy to Kwalitee. Everyone agrees it's
pretty important, but as Open Source people we also agree that
it's not VERY important.

So we pay people with Kwalitee play money tokens for doing 
their modules right. It's hokey, but that's the point.

> I think you are thinking of Reputation (which a node has), not XP
> (which a user has). 

Speaking of reputation, what about factoring in the results of
Google searches. If it has lots of links to it on the web, it
bears checking out.

Science is 'a kind of "gift economy" where freely recognized
reputation is the systemically defined resource sought by
participants.' --Gus DiZerega

-- 
Greg Matheson, Taiwan


Re: bug with Test::Exception? or imacat's autotest box?

2006-01-31 Thread Greg Matheson
On Tue, 31 Jan 2006, Tyler MacDonald wrote:

> Take a look at this output:

> http://www.nntp.perl.org/group/perl.cpan.testers/285112

> It looks like this particular system is not noticing that Test::Exception
> requires Sub::Uplevel, then gets confused thinking it was *my* module that
> needed Sub::Uplevel. What's even more concerning is the presence of line
> noise right after the "make test FAILED"... Any idea what can be going on
> here?

It's a NLS error message. In Big 5, it says. 'This file or
directory does not exist.'

-- 
Greg MathesonVent the Pent.
 --Samuel Beckett