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DonielF
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  1. I propose that we use the full series of tags on the Chumash. It's broad enough that anyone can participate ( might be too intricate for many users), but not overly broad.
  2. After much deliberation, I strongly feel that adding a bounty for the winner is a bit overkill. Participants have plenty of incentive as it is:
  • 10 reputation per upvote per answer + 15 reputation per acceptance per answer + "post as many upvoted answers as possible" = high incentive to reach the 200 rep cap each day of the competition. And there's no limit to the duration of the competition.
  • If the answers are high-enough quality, there's potentially 400 reputation on the line.
  • If the answers are on questions meeting certain criteria, there's an additional 300 reputation.
  • So, conceivably, users are already raking in potentially thousands of reputation.
  1. I don't see a good solution here. The large majority of users seem to live in the UK, Israel, and US, so my vote is for option 2. That seems to be the best option, though it's not a particularly good oneI don't see a good solution here. The large majority of users seem to live in the UK, Israel, and US, so my vote is for option 2. That seems to be the best option, though it's not a particularly good one. See Monica's answer.
  1. I propose that we use the full series of tags on the Chumash. It's broad enough that anyone can participate ( might be too intricate for many users), but not overly broad.
  2. After much deliberation, I strongly feel that adding a bounty for the winner is a bit overkill. Participants have plenty of incentive as it is:
  • 10 reputation per upvote per answer + 15 reputation per acceptance per answer + "post as many upvoted answers as possible" = high incentive to reach the 200 rep cap each day of the competition. And there's no limit to the duration of the competition.
  • If the answers are high-enough quality, there's potentially 400 reputation on the line.
  • If the answers are on questions meeting certain criteria, there's an additional 300 reputation.
  • So, conceivably, users are already raking in potentially thousands of reputation.
  1. I don't see a good solution here. The large majority of users seem to live in the UK, Israel, and US, so my vote is for option 2. That seems to be the best option, though it's not a particularly good one.
  1. I propose that we use the full series of tags on the Chumash. It's broad enough that anyone can participate ( might be too intricate for many users), but not overly broad.
  2. After much deliberation, I strongly feel that adding a bounty for the winner is a bit overkill. Participants have plenty of incentive as it is:
  • 10 reputation per upvote per answer + 15 reputation per acceptance per answer + "post as many upvoted answers as possible" = high incentive to reach the 200 rep cap each day of the competition. And there's no limit to the duration of the competition.
  • If the answers are high-enough quality, there's potentially 400 reputation on the line.
  • If the answers are on questions meeting certain criteria, there's an additional 300 reputation.
  • So, conceivably, users are already raking in potentially thousands of reputation.
  1. I don't see a good solution here. The large majority of users seem to live in the UK, Israel, and US, so my vote is for option 2. That seems to be the best option, though it's not a particularly good one. See Monica's answer.
Source Link
DonielF
  • 34.7k
  • 12
  • 23

  1. I propose that we use the full series of tags on the Chumash. It's broad enough that anyone can participate ( might be too intricate for many users), but not overly broad.
  2. After much deliberation, I strongly feel that adding a bounty for the winner is a bit overkill. Participants have plenty of incentive as it is:
  • 10 reputation per upvote per answer + 15 reputation per acceptance per answer + "post as many upvoted answers as possible" = high incentive to reach the 200 rep cap each day of the competition. And there's no limit to the duration of the competition.
  • If the answers are high-enough quality, there's potentially 400 reputation on the line.
  • If the answers are on questions meeting certain criteria, there's an additional 300 reputation.
  • So, conceivably, users are already raking in potentially thousands of reputation.
  1. I don't see a good solution here. The large majority of users seem to live in the UK, Israel, and US, so my vote is for option 2. That seems to be the best option, though it's not a particularly good one.