Elianna, on 2011-January-06, 15:16, said:
First off, I notice that the people nominated are who people think are the best players (with perhaps minimal number of ongoing arguments, as there is one that is missing and that is the only reason I could find for his omission), but I don't understand why someone needs to be a good player to be a good moderator. Maybe to be a good responder to questions in the play/bidding question forums, but not to watch discussion and be able to deal with people in a rational manner that is professional and fair.
I did not nominate the people whom I considered to be the best bridge players on the forum (no offense, guys
), but rather those whose replies I always consider rational, level-headed and fair. I also excluded some people of whom I suspected that they would not be interested. I suspect there is a correlation between this property and bridge-playing ability.
Of course, people who don't post as much have not had as much opportunity to impress me with their level-headedness. I mean I could nominate Elianna, but even she has over 1000 posts.
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The one change that I think should be taken seriously is a reorganization of the forums. I believe that this was brought up a long time ago (where's gwynn when you need him?) but with all these different (and overlapping) categories, it gets rather confusing where to post certain topics. Say you have a problem that involves taking inference from the bidding to plan play. Do you post this in SAYC, because it involves understanding the auction? Do you post it in interesting bridge hands? Do you post it in the Beginning/Intermediate forum? Or maybe in offline bridge because it happened offline?
In this reorganization I would love to see a pairing down of different forums, and better descriptions of what should go in each forum, so that an OP can make better decisions about where to place threads.
I would be willing to put effort into making a good suggestion... if only there were any hint that it might actually be considered...
"One of the painful things about our time is that those who feel certainty are stupid, and those with any imagination and understanding are filled with doubt and indecision"
-- Bertrand Russell