a quick google search produced the following results: what jsgoddess knows
( )
a quick google search produced the following results: what jsgoddess knows
( )
Hee.
I understand the sentiment, but I disagree. Let me give you an example of why. This thread on the stereotypical “kung fu” riff is one of the most interesting threads I’ve participated in. The question was never fully answered, and (with one exception) the people posting in the thread weren’t really experts at all. However, a number of posters pooled their amateur research efforts, enough so that the question was at least partially answered. In addition, I’m pretty convinced that the full answer to the original question is “no one knows.”
My point here is, if posters in that thread restricted themselves to only “personal knowledge,” the thread would have sunk like a stone, with only a handful of unsupported personal anecdotes as replies. Sometimes these “research project” threads can be awfully beneficial.
An excellent example of the wisdom of crowds (the title of a book by James Surowiecki in which he posits that "large groups of people are smarter than an elite few, no matter how brilliant—better at solving problems, fostering innovation, coming to wise decisions, even predicting the future. "