I actually think a "better help forum" would be a pretty good idea. The current forum format is nice for discussion but has a few problems as a source of help:
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It's hard to tell when a question is answered. So a question fell off the front page. Did it get answered or was it just kind of lost? How successful are people at answering questions? Who are the top askers/answerers, and can you use those people to help?
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No real "frequently asked questions" feature in the forum threads. There's
Ableton's FAQ but it's dense enough to be more of a mini knowledge base than a real FAQ that people who came to the forum with questions would notice.
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Incomprehensible questions. Many questions are too vague to really answer, not really a question, or so muddled and rambly that it's hard to tell what's even being asked. Frequently there's a follow up post in the same thread about how nobody's answering the question ("bump? Anybody?"). The forum format doesn't actively help these people improve their questions and get answers.
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Derailings. This is a problem with any threaded-discussion format.
Now we've got
Ableton Answers, which is a great Q&A format idea, but it's got some growing pains too:
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UHE is easier to use. Just ask
the Answers thread.
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People expect a forum. Lots of "answers" are posted that are really just discussion. That's not how it's supposed to work, that's what the comments feature is for. But the threaded-discussion thing seems to be baked into the users' mindsets right now. I see this on
StackExchange's audio (+video) site too.
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Low visibility. You can glance at UHE when you're already visiting the forum. Answers requires a separate trip with fairly specific intent. Hey Tarekith, you're kind of the local expert here. How often do you visit Answers?
It's pretty clear to me that there are many needs that neither UHE nor Answers is currently meeting, but could. I know I talk about Stack Exchange every time these Q&A threads come up, but I think a lot of tricks they use (but not all of them) would be really helpful here.
memes_33 points out that:
memes_33 wrote:there's a new "which USB hub do you recommend" post every week.
So none of those posters searched. What if the forum searched for you? On StackExchange, when you type in a question title, it pops up a list of questions that it thinks might be relevant. Half the time I start asking a question it turns out it was already asked and I wasn't using the right search terms. And for people who post duplicates anyway, you can get rid of them and have the closed questions redirect to the original question. It's half wiki.
Muzik 4 Machines, you've had the opposite problem:
Muzik 4 Machines wrote:
maybe, but i asked some questions that got ignored even tho there is no results in the search, and not even an answer at google 20th page, so people seems to just snob any questions in the help exchange forum
Could you link me to one of these? I'm willing to bet that something about the question didn't attract a lot of people reading it. If it was a bad title, or a difficult-to-read question, it would've been cool if there was some way for people to suggest this to you (comments? up and down votes? wiki-style edit proposals?). I'd be curious to see if it was something that would've gotten more traffic on another Q&A site with a different format (like SE or Quora or something).