Vanilla 1.1.9 is a product of Lussumo. More Information: Documentation, Community Support.
I disagree that we need another whole voting system. Votes should take into account whether or not a question makes sense and whether or not the user has done the required preliminary work before asking the question (check wikipedia, the nLab, familiar references). People should also not ask questions where the answerer has to fill in any blanks to figure out what the question actually is. This is to discourage, among other things, people asking questions about things with which they aren't really familiar. It's very easy to ask such a question. Simply pick any field of mathematics that you've never studied seriously about which you've heard something cool or interesting sounding.
For example, I know nothing about the standard conjectures, algebraic cycles, motives, etc. However, I've heard cool things about them, and I could very easily ask a question about them that would have a great answer (a great answer I wouldn't understand, no less!). However, the question is bound to be flawed and a waste of the experts' time. This is the impression I got from all of the user in question's posts. When you ask a question, you should expect that you'll understand the answer (this may not always be true, but sometimes problems are harder than they appear).
Voting for the question based on the quality of the answers is madness. On MO, votes should be cast based on the merits of the post itself. The less clear a question is, the more interesting answers it admits, simply because what passes for a relevant answer is less restrictive.
Noah, editing is a problem when someone posts a good answer to the wrong question.
An intermediate solution is for all of us to learn polite ways to say "this question is badly written", and leave more comments. I often ask the poster to provide more context or motivation, and it's easy to phrase this as "you'll get better answers if ...". On the other hand, I think most of my comments about poor grammar or failure to use appropriate capitalisation and punctuation come across very badly. It's hard not to be impatient with people about simple things like this, and harder to couch it as "this will turn out better if ...".
1 to 6 of 6