NickWalker wrote: ↑04 May 2023 19:03
I've been thinking about this and I'd be interested in seeing some of these threads where people ask a basic beginners question and then someone answers it in an unnecessarily 'techie' way. Have a look down the 'General Usage' forum and find the conversations where that happens. I've looked through the last 24 posts and that hasn't been the case in any of them as far as I can see.
I wonder if we're getting hung up on the word 'techie' when the original post mentioned 'technical', 'bewildering discourse' and 'specialist'.
Those of us who are 'old hands' know there are questions that can't be answered without some technical content (typically data references and expressions); there isn't much we can do about that, other than perhaps to check if the person asking the question is happy with that sort of solution, or would prefer a compromise that's 'out-of-the-box'. Which is more work for the person answering the question, so like all good intentions would probably fall by the wayside.
'Bewildering discourse' is something we should be able to reduce. As a group, we do tend to throw multiple answers at a question: 'You can do this'. 'You can also do this, this, this or this.' 'I do this'. 'I find this works'... And that's before we get into the 'interesting discussions/digressions' about how many angels can dance on this particular pin-head, and whether Gedcom version umpteen will solve a problem the OP doesn't have/doesn't care about.
When I was starting out (lo, these many years ago) I didn't need 6 different ways to do something, I just needed one that let me get on with recording my research. We might want to bear our early days in mind...
Likewise, the vast majority of people couldn't give two figs about the specialist nuances around how something works -- they just want a solution they can use. If somebody really want to discuss angels and pinheads, as a courtesy they might consider starting a new topic. I wouldn't want to see those discussions go away, but do think they can be daunting.
And so to 'specialist', which really means 'stuff I don't care about'. Restructuring the forums will help with this to some degree, by making it easier to avoid certain topics, but we as a group are not going to stop catering to all levels of experience and interest, so inevitably, user will come across discussions they don't understand and can (and should) safely ignore.
Edited to add: apolgies to anyone who feels singled out by my examples. Many of us have fallen into the same bad habits...