@SpookDoc has also shown strong interest I guess? Also suggested a new (to me) way to collect the data.
Which, at the end of the day, and given the latest discussions, how to collect the data seems to be the trickiest part.
I have a few questions here, addressed at different people:
-
@SpookDoc this Microsoft Forms thing. I only quickly tried it yesterday so I probably only discovered the tip of the iceberg. It seems to be a very intuitive and more "standard" way to conduct such a survey. However, as good as that system can be to collect the data, can it be used to process it and present it in a consistent manner?
Also, making people go out of this forum to complete that survey might be a bigger issue than we, at first thought, envision. Always assume people's laziness for extra steps.
I'm also thinking: eg. one person votes for Elk, another for Wapiti. Would this therefore make Elk and Wapiti have one vote each despite being the same thing? Wouldn't you need to resort to Excel (or similar) for that anyway, as well as for spelling mistakes?
- Species/subspecies debate. I like the idea of forcing participants to submit scientific names, but that's solely based on my own selfish perspective as someone who run a meta-wishlist. Wouldn't that deter some people to post a wishlist at all? We all have to think that the average audience is people who like animals but don't have a deep and sharp knowledge on scientific names, species/subspecies categories or even decent internet-searching abilities altogether. We might be losing lots of potential participants this way, and always bear in mind that getting more and more people should be a priority.
-
@SuzieSky that code you speak of: do you reckon it'd be easy to use by other people?
Also, I know you've made your point clear about subspecies. Fair enough. I also understand not wanting to include domestic breeds at this point. That could be done separately later down the line. However, do you think allowing very few exceptions for subespecies (we all know what I'm talking about: essentially lions, leopards, tigers, wolves and brown bears) would be such a big deal for you? Wouldn't that be a decent compromise if you make that exception clear in the OP? We'd be talking an extra 20-25 animals, compared to the thousands of species people would submit.
Mind you, I understand your point completely. Like, it's a pain that some people vote for generic grey wolf, and others vote for eg. Iberian wolf. But wouldn't we have the same situation with people requesting a "generic gibbon" vs. a Lar gibbon?