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Comment by dang

7 years ago

There were several threads about this. We merged them into the one that was posted first.

We changed the url to the most readable and least press-releasey. The others were:

https://twitter.com/EdHammondNY/status/1056604618015285248

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2018-10-28/ibm-is-sa...

https://www.redhat.com/en/about/press-releases/ibm-acquire-r...

In my opinion: Either invest in developing hacker news support for updated news comment threads better (my recommendation is to split each thread by the original article/time in a megathread and use the newest title for the base merged thread and sort the sub-threads by time or stop merging these threads because it makes it so freaking confusing as the comments are based on totally different contexts and yet they are all intermingled.

Prime other example being the tesla going private thread which I think is this one but I'm not sure because the threads are so hacked together or duped I cannot find a hacker news link to the original tweet [0].

[0]: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=17709799

  • This happens whenever a story is changing rapidly. It doesn't have to do with merging the threads—it has to do with different comments dating from when different information was available. In this case the initial story was "might acquire" and then turned into "has acquired". The threads weren't neatly partitioned before we merged them; people just post to whichever discussion they happen to see.

    When a story has been changing while the comments have been accumulating, HN readers are smart enough to figure it out, and I'm not sure adding new software would help much.

    • The threads were neatly partitioned because they were all based on an initial source of information (the source article), but it was then merged into one mega-thread contained conflicting sources and thus it makes it confusing since all the comments which were based on different sources are now intermingled.

      2 replies →

    • I think it's reasonable to expect HN readers to realise that threads have been merged, but it can be difficult to track down the article in question all the same.

      Whilst complex threading might seem to counter the simplicty of HN, might it be reasonable to include a link to the original article when merging?