Beezy said:
Also, experienced beekeepers shouldn't be able to vote 'no' to a new beek section
Monsieur Abeille said:
Who do you think would be posting all the answers to our dumb questions?
Beezy said:
Well, I disagree. This forum has the most random search returns of all the forums I belong to
Let me see . . . experienced beeks don't get a vote, so a New Beek section is created and all sorts of questions, good, bad and ugly get asked, but the more experienced beeks decide it is not something that they had a say in and so decide that it doesn't exist and fail to contribute – Who and where is/are the winner/s?
So Mr Breezy, Help Admin out and describe, comprehensively, how the search facilites at these other forums is an improvement over the current model. Give some examples of searches that you feel might be of importance.
What parameters do you feel are important in a search? Original Poster of thread? Date of response?
Does anyone add tags to their posts? I suspect that most of us do not, as it's just too much trouble to remain consistent with ourselves, never mind with each other.
You can always step outside the forum and Google your query if you feel that the search engine here isn't smart enough for you. I suspect however though that Google probably has different priorities than those you might feel appropriate too.
For example, given the limited subject matter, you are likely to be snowed by all the popular terms:
queen, drone, worker, honey, thymol, varroa, TBH etc. So the search really only comes into it's own when you can connect a thread with a user and a date period. Nature of the subject I suspect.
To get a meaningful minimal search result, you actually need to know what you are looking for in the first place. Not the answer perhaps, but certainly elements of the question. It doesn't help that the attitude to meandering threads is one of acceptance and not rigid, which means that indexing some of the real pearls that occur can be difficult because they come up out of context with the original purpose of a thread.
I think that on joining a forum such as this, it's beholden to run back 12 months and at least skim read the posts. The investment in time will answer a lot of questions that hadn't been thought of originally. Instant gratification comes at a cost and I feel that it is not always reasonable to ask others to do all the donkey work. After all the time of each one of us is personally worth the same amount.
No particular opinion, but tend to think that segregation of new and experienced is not a good idea. It has to be expected that there must be a basic level of competence before anyone can meaningfully join in various conversations as anything other than noise. Even if that skill is in finding a published viewpoint and querying the thinking behind it given your other earthly experiences in other areas.