Karl Fogel
Karl Fogel
> At the moment I am planing to make repos private and then delete them (will remove benchmarks as well), unless others suggest better ideas. The first commenter, @NathanSMB, makes...
A license would be helpful, agreed. At least in the U.S., the software isn't open source unless an open source license explicitly applied (https://opensource.org/faq may help here). Now, maybe @jbowens...
There would still be a demand for one central company that is the go-to place for those who don't want to set up their own server. Typically, one of the...
Okay, I've implemented this in an extensible way [in this branch](https://github.com/kfogel/awesomplete/tree/continuation-hint). The diff is pretty small; it's all in [commit 8ec7dbae](https://github.com/kfogel/awesomplete/commit/8ec7dbae1b50e28426054f6c65210bd626c7832c). You can see an example of it in use...
Thank you, @bbenjamin. I'll take a look. (I assume you meant "and more..." above, right?)
At one organization that uses Helios, we are discussing the Single Transferable Vote (STV) method, a form of ranked-choice voting that is quite appropriate for many elections (e.g., open seats...
@wolftune: Er? Isn't it possible to come up with pathological results for any voting system, including score voting? I'm too lazy to actually construct one now, but if I just...
Thanks; yes, that's enough for me. I was looking at http://electology.org/ for this comparison, and they didn't have it. Meanwhile, I went to http://rangevoting.org/ but was so put off (I'm...
Electology just needs a section explaining to voting geeks why approval-voting and score-voting are better than ${SOME_OTHER_SYSTEM_VOTING_GEEKS_KNOW_ABOUT}, that's all.
@wolftune BTW, I think the way in which score voting avoids Arrow's Theorem is simply by refusing voters a way to express a preference they might actually have (e.g., the...