Re: Keeping rc10talk strong, what are members doing?
Posted: Fri May 25, 2012 12:48 pm
What? You mean you DON'T want this site to be like RCTech, with bajillions of members and 200 pages to go through to find a single nugget of useful info (or not) on one specific topic, where some topics grew so large that it broke the forum's "last post" redirects for MONTHS??!
I like the size of RC10Talk and the level of knowledge of the average member is WAY higher than what you find "with the other sites". This place also seems to lack the distinct haughty arrogance displayed by a good number of people "over there".
I've always believed that all too often, growing too big isn't a good thing. Wonderful little restaurants that gain popularity by word of mouth & consistently great food often sell out to become franchises, and everything goes downhill and turns to sh!t. The same goes for awesome little free software programs; once the word gets out how many people are downloading a certain program, the advertisers take notice, ads & spam & popups appear, the program grows with bloatware as it tries to do more & more unnecessary things that it didn't need before, and before you know it, you have to pay for the program.
RCTech has useful info, but has sadly FAR outgrown it's boots. You have to wade through such a morass of crap to find a specific info you need that it's not even worth the trouble anymore.
The guys running this joint are doing a fine job; keep it up!
I like the size of RC10Talk and the level of knowledge of the average member is WAY higher than what you find "with the other sites". This place also seems to lack the distinct haughty arrogance displayed by a good number of people "over there".
I've always believed that all too often, growing too big isn't a good thing. Wonderful little restaurants that gain popularity by word of mouth & consistently great food often sell out to become franchises, and everything goes downhill and turns to sh!t. The same goes for awesome little free software programs; once the word gets out how many people are downloading a certain program, the advertisers take notice, ads & spam & popups appear, the program grows with bloatware as it tries to do more & more unnecessary things that it didn't need before, and before you know it, you have to pay for the program.
RCTech has useful info, but has sadly FAR outgrown it's boots. You have to wade through such a morass of crap to find a specific info you need that it's not even worth the trouble anymore.
The guys running this joint are doing a fine job; keep it up!