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Comment by cbhl

6 years ago

Previously:

2018: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=9338708

A few more:

https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=17602158

  • Obvious feature request for HN: page that lists most reposted stories / links. :)

    • That would be the ‘past’ link, though it doesn’t turn anything up in this case as the title on this post is different. (The usual title is “The case of the 500-mile email,” but this copy is missing the subject line for some reason so the submitter used a representative phrase instead.)

  • Ha, I was just thinking if one wanted to farm karma they could just set up a cron to post this monthly. Seems to be a perennial favorite!

  • Yes, this story gets posted a lot, and many of us might know it, but at the same time, I like to think about the ones that didn't. They will learn something new today. XKCD said it better than I could: https://xkcd.com/1053/

    • Genuine perennial favs are worth repeating every so often --- a year or two's interval seems reasonable, and is vouched by HN.

      A marker of aging for me was seeing, a decade or two after I'd first read them in the local paper as a callow youth, repeats of previous features, by topic if not the actual text. Eventually the thought occurred to me that perhaps the versions I'd remembered were themselves not original.

      People tell, and repeat, and embellish, stories. Sometimes because the young'uns and whippersnappers and new arrivals haven't heard them yet. Sometimes because they're just damned good stories and we enjoy the retelling.

      1 reply →

    • One of the most endearing xkcd strips. A bit lightbulb moment when I figured this out in my life.

  • Generally people submit links to past submissions that have comments that maybe of interest.

  • The reason people share links from the past isn't some passive aggressive "UGH reposts amirite?!" like what you appear to be doing -- it's because past discussion on a fun read has lots of fun morsels of comments, and it's fun to revisit them alongside today's discussion.

    HN doesn't have a rule that there should only be one canonical submission for every individual link or topic. That you thought your comment would contribute anything leads me to believe that you aren't aware of that.