"Per" is a name, most common in Skandinavia, I think.
As for moderators, I think it's more a question of "do we need some", not "do we have people who want to be one". And personally, I'm a bit suspicious of people who want power (just look at any government to see how that works out).
Moderators
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- Trained
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Re: Moderators
not chickening out josh, was a bit of humor
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- Trained
- Posts: 81
- Joined: 02 Aug 2010, 19:46
Re: Moderators
Dont want power.cybersphinx wrote:"Per" is a name, most common in Skandinavia, I think.
As for moderators, I think it's more a question of "do we need some", not "do we have people who want to be one". And personally, I'm a bit suspicious of people who want power (just look at any government to see how that works out).
Just want to help out around the website
and i agree with you on the government issue
Re: Moderators
"Per" is a fairly common name in Scandinavia, as cybersphinx points out. It's the equivalent of "Peter" in English-speaking locales. It's unlikely that's the same person.ClockWork wrote:Speaking of moderators...Per is apparently an admin staff on another site.
There certainly is a science to stuff like this, though.ClockWork wrote:Perhaps he can shed some light on this? Maybe it’s just purely a coincidence, But if Per really did manage to be an admin on multiple sites, then there is probably some kind of science to climbing the moderative staff ladder.
On an open-source project like this, the simplest way to become a moderator is to learn programming and submit a lot of useful patches.
Re: Moderators
Wow, does that work?Zarel wrote:...
On an open-source project like this, the simplest way to become a moderator is to learn programming and submit a lot of useful patches.