c0diator
c0diator
c0diator

I HAVE NO GODDAMNED IDEA! I spend like 30-60 minutes searching for these each week. It is driving me nuts! NUTS I TELL YOU!

Seen it in the Preview. I'm going with "raven."

Technically, you can't take the under on Jon's parentage at this point (would be unfair to those who took in when it was originally proposed).

He created some kind of hydraulic mount for the things so Bronn could whip it around and aim it like it weighed nothing. He also made a two-man winch a one-man winch.

I think he reads reddit or some other source of fan theories too. He is up on CleganeBowl, the Ice Dragon, etc etc.

*sound of airhorns*

Don't worry, Kinja will fix it.

This is one week where we are seeing eye-to-eye. That "let us reassure you about Kinja" was deeply unsettling.

I'd say we have at least a couple hundred people not cheating. edit: Explaination for that comment: we get about 250 players a week on the site, and only a couple people at the top look suspicious in terms of cheating.

It is, that is a mistake.

I was hoping to see substantive questions such as these answered.

Exactly right. If they cannot articulate why it makes economic sense for their team to prioritize work on fixing the commenting system, there is no reason to suspect those changes will happen. One potential claim might be, "a healthy community is a leading indicator of success that leads to ad revenue, a trailing

Randian uber-men delight in feasting on the garmonbozia of us lesser men.

Let's place blame where it belongs: on Peter Thiel, who secretly funded a lawsuit meant to undermine the fourth estate.

UX designers for Kinja clearly don't have eyes.

You are assuming the devs aren't using some kind of asyncronous on-demand loading technique made trivial by modern javascript toolchains. e.g. If the comment system isn't loading, the JS for that system isn't loaded.

Yep. That is my point about "we have control" versus "actual engineering priorities." Better commenting systems don't "bring home the bacon," as it were, for Kinja engineers. Whereas it does for Disqus engineers. The current state if the Kinja commenting system is a testament to that.

This. I made this comment below. Disqus' entire mission is to creating a quality commenting system. Kinja's mission is to be a great CMS to drive content views in the social media landscape. Which team do you want working on your comments system? What is the value of "control" to the community when your priorities are

More productively: what are the top priorities for Kinja's engineers? What are the metrics on which you are measured? What are the economic pressures that have created the Kinja commenting system as it exists today?

The problem with this reply is: as much as I hate the excessive tracking of Disqus, they have a lot of engineers working across a lot of client sites and have built a great, usable, legible product. Their entire company purpose is making a great commenting system (and packaging our data and selling it on the open