Open thunderbiscuit opened 2 years ago
A potential initial distribution of these could be:
Congratulations! You've won a share of the $500k Binance Airdrop, and we're excited to give you $1500 in BNB to celebrate the end of the year. Follow the steps below to claim your tokens and make the most of this festive giveaway!
Don't miss out on your $1500 in BNB! Act now to secure your tokens.
Winners: @a526757124, @fakenickels, @judybabyq, @Zatline, @zupri, @yoongann, @tachi-hi, @jbstrip, @eleev, @zfreet, @hajoeun, @Kurt-Pan, @anyshy, @DR-YangLong, @wangyanchang21, @TechnoTrev, @mixvoronov, @foton79, @secp256, @Linkea, @fxplayer, @naivefeng, @88SL, @0xvivi, @dariubs, @merend, @fuqiang915, @w20089527, @Jeanselme, @zhuyanxuan, @Ekove, @siddhant-08, @NoodlesSui, @EdLeed, @OneIsaiah, @toxic-popovich, @perlmutterlabs, @giuseppe-testa, @correosdelbosque, @Seanld, @imRishN, @apoorv007, @andman753, @schaelle, @aigora-de, @cnicolaide, @dream-mind, @GiovanniBordiga, @drewroberts, @leinue
This issue is to discuss the process of how to choose questions to include on the website.
Proposed Approach
I think that having broad topic categories is helpful, as opposed to simply having a list of questions from 1 to 100.
Given this, if we don't want the question numbers by category to jump from 1 to 7 to 29 in the sidebar, we'll have to either: a. decide on the full set of questions prior to launching the site b. outline a number of questions for each category and try to find corresponding questions
I suggest we try approach (b) for now; I have written a very large number of categories as a brainstorm exercise (partially using the tags in the Stack Exchange) and attempted to group them in respective "broad" categories. My current "broad" categories are:
How does that sound?