This thread is a microcosm of everything annoying about reddit.
A guy posts a photo of a spider wondering if it is a "brown recluse" gets a bunch of different answers many repeats, several people calling him stupid for not 'just googling it' a few calls to burn down the house and move.
It's not a brown recluse. Even if it were they aren't aggressive. Move to a remote location. There is a really good video about the reputation these spiders have I'll link next.
I think it's nice that people go to expert forums to find out about insects. It would be nice if everyone would read the other replies before adding their own.
It would be nice if taking time to tell someone to "google it" would just die... particularly with how google and other searches have... become much less useful over time.
I think the term 'google it' probably means one should try and find the answer or at least make some effort before asking. However I agree this is less helpful, our vocabulary has changed so we google something rather than search it implies google is the only way to search for information, this is not helped by basic IT classes using google and not mentioning alternatives.
Same goes for promoting facebook or zoom, it makes it much harder for replacements to get a proper foothold.
@zleap @futurebird We're also at a point where online information is increasingly suspect and flooded with bad info. ChatGPT will confidently give you a very wrong answer, particularly on things like this.
Expert forums are probably going to get more important.
Quora now give GPT gumbo answers to question, and it's blended in with the real human answers. I hate it so much. (labeled, thankfully but what do you think people will make of such labels??)
Not that Quora was ever useful even before this started.
I have found a useful answer on quora, which was about making up molar solutions.
We could start discussions about teaching here, I am not a teacher but running code club and am looking for more work as a teaching assistant, so learning about some of the teaching planning processes is really useful
@zleap @MichaelTBacon
There was a short time when there were some good discussion on teaching methods there... though this isn't true anymore.