Srs Bsn Poll: Linking vs Commenting
Sep. 6th, 2010 09:56 pmSo, let's say you've created the Platonic Ideal of Internet Something. You've made the most awesome vid ever, your artwork is so awesome it's making grown Annas weep, you've written the most awesome blog post ever on an important subject, your fic is the best thing since sliced bread and maybe even before... You know, the sort of stuff that people link, comment on, and discuss.
Noting, of course, that every Awesome Thing is going to get negative as well as positive commentary, what do you think about people who just link with 'Go see this, it's awesome' (or even lengthy additional commentary) versus people who comment to say "This was awesome, thank you!". Or do you prefer people to do both? And what about people who think what you've created is awful and you should feel awful? Comment? Link? Both? Neither?
I'm genuinely curious what people think and feel about it in regards to themselves.
Turnabout being fair play, I sometimes feel woeful when something I worked really hard on gets very few comments, even if it ends up getting a lot of hits that seem to be from "positive" responses (like a recent post I did that I can see doing the rounds of twitter links, but has garnered all of three comments). And yet, I rarely comment anywhere anymore, I mostly link, and I'm not sure that all spaces are generating discussion so much as they are generating back-patting. I don't know. It's very fraught, isn't it?
In more positive news, school starts soon and I am so excited I could dance. Late night openings at the library!!!!!
Noting, of course, that every Awesome Thing is going to get negative as well as positive commentary, what do you think about people who just link with 'Go see this, it's awesome' (or even lengthy additional commentary) versus people who comment to say "This was awesome, thank you!". Or do you prefer people to do both? And what about people who think what you've created is awful and you should feel awful? Comment? Link? Both? Neither?
I'm genuinely curious what people think and feel about it in regards to themselves.
Poll #4287 SRS BSN
Open to: All, detailed results viewable to: All, participants: 44
Assuming Positive: Linking vs Commenting: Fight!
View Answers
Linking is awesomer than Commenting!![]()
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6 (13.6%)
Commenting is better than Linking!![]()
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1 (2.3%)
Link AND Comment! Two great tastes that taste great together![]()
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34 (77.3%)
I am deep in Not Caring Country and I'm not coming back![]()
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3 (6.8%)
Assuming Negative: Linking vs Commenting
View Answers
Linking is better.![]()
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10 (23.3%)
Commenting is better.![]()
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12 (27.9%)
Link & Comment.![]()
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15 (34.9%)
Keep your negative commentary to yourself, thank you.![]()
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6 (14.0%)
Obligatory Melle question
View Answers
Maple![]()
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9 (22.5%)
Vanilla Bean![]()
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16 (40.0%)
Cinnamon Kiss![]()
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16 (40.0%)
It's like deja vu all over again....![]()
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9 (22.5%)
Other![]()
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8 (20.0%)
Turnabout being fair play, I sometimes feel woeful when something I worked really hard on gets very few comments, even if it ends up getting a lot of hits that seem to be from "positive" responses (like a recent post I did that I can see doing the rounds of twitter links, but has garnered all of three comments). And yet, I rarely comment anywhere anymore, I mostly link, and I'm not sure that all spaces are generating discussion so much as they are generating back-patting. I don't know. It's very fraught, isn't it?
In more positive news, school starts soon and I am so excited I could dance. Late night openings at the library!!!!!
no subject
Date: 2010-09-07 01:14 am (UTC)My answers are based on my own behaviors. In a perfect world, I would immediately comment on the author's platform, then link-with-explanation at my locale – for positive values. For negative values (sometimes abbreviated "point & laugh" or "link & moan" I very rarely comment at the author's because I'm rarely interested in debating on the net. (No, really).
Yeah, but in this imperfect world, I leave positive comments at the author's, and do link spams every 8 weeks or so at my place.
(no subject)
From:(no subject)
From:Thoughts
Date: 2010-09-07 01:17 am (UTC)Re: Thoughts
From:Re: Thoughts
From:Re: Thoughts
From:no subject
Date: 2010-09-07 01:31 am (UTC)I try not to do negative comments. (Comments to correct errors are my function on the 'Net.) Once in a while the snark is strong in this one, though.
(no subject)
From:no subject
Date: 2010-09-07 02:24 am (UTC)With fanfic and vids and such, I usually do try to comment if I liked it, since comments mean a lot to me, even if it's only a couple of words.
(no subject)
From:no subject
Date: 2010-09-07 02:48 am (UTC)I am always seriously startled when I discover that someone, say, recced and linked something I wrote - because it's almost never by anyone who commented, and I have no idea, until someone else tells me.
(no subject)
From:no subject
Date: 2010-09-07 04:36 am (UTC)As it is, she got appologist for the MDA in my journal. But at least there, I was able to answer her directly.
(Edited to fix a typo and to add: Other: Cherry/Almond --with the Vanilla Bean! Please? Yes!)
(no subject)
From:(no subject)
From:no subject
Date: 2010-09-07 04:46 am (UTC)Ideally, pingbacks would be something that actually worked on DW and LJ and thus people would know they had been linked. I would like to know I've been linked and I have no problem with people knowing I link them. But fandom is so dead set against pingbacks (even when they're not sending you the text of locked posts) that I don't know if that will ever happen.
(no subject)
From:no subject
Date: 2010-09-07 10:29 am (UTC)(no subject)
From:no subject
Date: 2010-09-07 02:05 pm (UTC)...yeah, I don't comment. I really don't like the medium of comments at all, except on DW, where I feel more like I am hanging out with friends. On the Internet elsewhere, my comments are rare, like unicorns.
So, when I find work I like, I usually try to link it up; I'll mention it on my public Twitter and possibly drop it in Tumblr or one of my linkspams (I try not to do all three because some people follow me in all three places and I feel like that would get really annoying). If I REALLY like it, everyone who talks to me on IM will be bombarded with the link and demands to love it.
If I encounter work that pisses me off, I usually just pretend it doesn't exist, or I rant about in on DW, where other people can rant with me, and it is a happy festival of ranting.
I think there's kind of a--I mean, 'negative commentary' is a little vague--for me, if I see something that I think is pretty solid, but has a fundamental problem, and I know the creator and feel like it's worth it, I might drop an email along the lines of 'I really liked your piece on [whatever], but I noted that you kind of elided [this issue] and was curious to know if you'd be exploring it more at some point.' I'm a big fan of praise in public (with linking, in my case), chastise in private.
And, you know, speaking for myself, I tend to get very nervous when something is getting a lot of hits and I can't figure out where they are from. So I always appreciate it when I get an email saying 'I really liked your piece and linked it' because then I go 'oh, ok, those aren't from a secret forum where everyone is going 'look at this [pejorative of your choice]'.' Also, since I don't really leave comments, I also tend not to read them, which makes email the better way to reach me just in general.
Long comment is long.
(no subject)
From:no subject
Date: 2010-09-07 11:50 pm (UTC)I would prefer people who disagree with something I write to let me know, so I can look into it and correct it if necessary. I'm learning about my subject as I go along, so there are bound to be mistakes.
I don't mind getting no or very few comments, because plenty of people have told me that they like what I'm doing but that they often don't comment because they have nothing to say on that particular subject. Again, this is quite topic-specific; I sometimes post things that people don't really have much of an opinion on other than "oh yes, I like that too", which is a nice thing to hear, but isn't necessary. I guess this ties into your back-patting observation. There are quite a few blogs where I never bother reading the comments because I know they'll just be 50 iterations of "this is great!" but no actual content beyond that.
I don't think I've ever commented on FWD, though I read it almost every day and have pointed several people to it both as a whole and as individual posts. (I think I have a bad case of "why would anyone care what Kake thinks?")
(no subject)
From:(no subject)
From:(no subject)
From:no subject
Date: 2010-09-09 12:43 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-09-09 06:20 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-09-09 02:13 pm (UTC)Off-Topic:
Date: 2010-09-07 12:06 pm (UTC)http://disstud.blogspot.com/2010/08/c
Re: Off-Topic:
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