Portsmgr Lurkers

Is it just me or is the term 'lurker' weird for a volunteer job?
Apprentice, Trainee, Manager in training.
Lurker? Are they peeking in someones windows?
 
  • Like
Reactions: bjs
Exactly 'to sneak away, go slowly"
Guy on ciderblock watching your daughter undress...

Just not a humbling term.

Maybe asstportsmgr for some formality. jrportsmgr

One of the things I have learned as a manager is that people like recognition.
Titles are a free way to recognize someones contributions.
 
I am not a PC guy and I know lurking in the cyberworld may have different meaning.
It still is not an endearing term.
 
Looking at Alexander88207 answering a ports question it dawned on me. The xenforo has it right. Aspiring.
aspiringportsmgr

That is my final answer. Dignified and Respectful.
 
aspiringportsmgr

I'm not sure that it's a better fit. The original announcement (2013-11-01) from the FreeBSD Ports Management Team Secretary:

Lurking

I suppose, learnt interpretations vary according to where and when the word is heard and seen. I don't doubt that it means different things to different people, but honestly, until two days ago I was not aware of any negative connotation.

2019 (data is beautiful):

1650067874801.png

2018: 23 Photos Where the Background Is Funnier Than the Main Action / Bright Side led to There's Something Funny Lurking In The Background (15 Pics) and There's Something Lurking in the Background of These 15 Photos

Pinterest: 20 Hilarious Pics Of Ridiculous People Lurking In The Background | Funny photos, … Hilarious

… and so on.
 
Back when I was a kid you would get clubbed in the head for lurking.
(Police would call it loitering)
Whats the difference between peeping and lurking? Same category.
Notice how "suspicious" comes up alot in the definition.

 
… I might call that junk science.

… Reddit claims to have 330 Million active monthly users....
blah-blah-blah- 6.4 Million users
Suggesting

Hmmm. That doesn't sound very scientific.

Scientific or not, the moderator's sticky comment drew attention to the opening poster's citations:

Reddit says it has 330 million monthly active users (source). Media outlets like CNBC and Variety trust those numbers so I'll consider them good enough for this project. I downloaded the full monthly datasets for posts and comments from the ever-amazing pushshift.io and used R to count how many distinct users make at least one submission or comment in a typical month. I found posts and comments from 6.4 million users. That means more than 98% of Reddit's monthly active users don't make a single post or comment over the course of a typical month. I made the viz in Illustrator.

OP's other comments included:

I'd love it if Reddit explained the math behind their Monthly Active User calculation. Fortunately we have pushshift.io to give us every possible public data point about the site.
 
One should see naming in historical context.It creates an openness of mind. As opposed to closed non-critical thinking.
[ PS: I don't need honnors , quote "Richard Feynmann" ]
 
Back
Top