Right, I can see that everything I said was ignored. It's like a religious debate with a fundamentalist. I mean, your entire personality is cliche, so much that you don't even know what cliche is at all. I now wonder if you are even capable of original thought, or if your unique personality has been replaced by popular culture. I sincerely hope that changes for you.
My best friend in high school started an internet forum in 9th grade. It was a tech/comp sci/gaming forum. He got around 40 members very quickly and it was a thriving site. My friend was an excellent coder and scripter, and we all had tons of fun. What we didn't have, though, was a competitive edge. In a year, the forum was down to 6 active members. The cause? Lack of content. People stayed to get coding help but that's about it. Now, my friend is an admin at dream in code, a coding only forum. Dream in code has thousands of active members, and there are constant contributions and content expansions. Therefore, dream in code has a competitive edge, and has grown instead of shrunk.
Now you don't seem to synthesize information very well, so here's the short explanation: content is what keeps members active and coming back.
Also, you are taking yourself way too seriously RIGHT NOW. Think about it if you can. If you don't understand it, ask somebody what it means. It's a very bad thing to do, especially when you have a new idea or if you are in an argument.
And for the love of god, learn how to use english.
QuoteWhat I was hoping to do, and you probably didn't realize, is start out with maybe at least, five, ten, twenty members so they can enjoy the community, tell their friends about it, and then it grows, grows into something unique. That's all I was trying to do, that's all, winkio. I hope you realize now, realize now what I was trying to do.
that passage was abysmal.