Skip to main content
replaced http://meta.ubuntu.stackexchange.com/ with https://meta.askubuntu.com/
Source Link

Seems like the same basic issue as http://meta.ubuntu.stackexchange.com/questions/47/how-do-we-tell-if-a-question-belongs-here-or-rather-at-stackoverflow-superuserHow do we tell if a question belongs here, or rather at stackoverflow/superuser?

It simply depends on the question.

Any basic question where the answer involves pointing the user to /etc/apache2/sites-{available,enabled}/ or /etc/apache2/mods-{available,enabled}/ certainly feels relevant for this site. On the other hand, to continue with an Apache example, a question comparing the benefits of different MPM:s (prefork, worker, etc) might do better at Server Fault.

Seems like the same basic issue as http://meta.ubuntu.stackexchange.com/questions/47/how-do-we-tell-if-a-question-belongs-here-or-rather-at-stackoverflow-superuser

It simply depends on the question.

Any basic question where the answer involves pointing the user to /etc/apache2/sites-{available,enabled}/ or /etc/apache2/mods-{available,enabled}/ certainly feels relevant for this site. On the other hand, to continue with an Apache example, a question comparing the benefits of different MPM:s (prefork, worker, etc) might do better at Server Fault.

Seems like the same basic issue as How do we tell if a question belongs here, or rather at stackoverflow/superuser?

It simply depends on the question.

Any basic question where the answer involves pointing the user to /etc/apache2/sites-{available,enabled}/ or /etc/apache2/mods-{available,enabled}/ certainly feels relevant for this site. On the other hand, to continue with an Apache example, a question comparing the benefits of different MPM:s (prefork, worker, etc) might do better at Server Fault.

edited body
Source Link
andol
  • 6.8k
  • 14
  • 5

Seems like the same basic issue as http://meta.ubuntu.stackexchange.com/questions/47/how-do-we-tell-if-a-question-belongs-here-or-rather-at-stackoverflow-superuser

It simply depends on the question.

Any basic question where the answer involves pointpointing the user to /etc/apache2/sites-{available,enabled}/ or /etc/apache2/mods-{available,enabled}/ certainly feels rather specific enoughrelevant for this site. On the other hand, to continue with an Apache example, a question comparing the benefits of different MPM:s (prefork, worker, etc) might do better at serverfaultServer Fault.

Seems like the same basic issue as http://meta.ubuntu.stackexchange.com/questions/47/how-do-we-tell-if-a-question-belongs-here-or-rather-at-stackoverflow-superuser

It simply depends on the question.

Any basic question where the answer involves point the user to /etc/apache2/sites-{available,enabled}/ or /etc/apache2/mods-{available,enabled}/ feels rather specific enough for this site. On the other hand, to continue with an Apache example, a question comparing the benefits of different MPM:s (prefork, worker, etc) might do better at serverfault.

Seems like the same basic issue as http://meta.ubuntu.stackexchange.com/questions/47/how-do-we-tell-if-a-question-belongs-here-or-rather-at-stackoverflow-superuser

It simply depends on the question.

Any basic question where the answer involves pointing the user to /etc/apache2/sites-{available,enabled}/ or /etc/apache2/mods-{available,enabled}/ certainly feels relevant for this site. On the other hand, to continue with an Apache example, a question comparing the benefits of different MPM:s (prefork, worker, etc) might do better at Server Fault.

Source Link
andol
  • 6.8k
  • 14
  • 5

Seems like the same basic issue as http://meta.ubuntu.stackexchange.com/questions/47/how-do-we-tell-if-a-question-belongs-here-or-rather-at-stackoverflow-superuser

It simply depends on the question.

Any basic question where the answer involves point the user to /etc/apache2/sites-{available,enabled}/ or /etc/apache2/mods-{available,enabled}/ feels rather specific enough for this site. On the other hand, to continue with an Apache example, a question comparing the benefits of different MPM:s (prefork, worker, etc) might do better at serverfault.