A story about Dart appeared on HackerNews about 13 hours ago:
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=5747961
I feel like this story fell off the front page pretty quickly, and I have a feeling it may have to do with a comment from a recent
techcrunch article, specifically:
Another subtle [HackerNews] feature addition: a flame-war detector. Graham has been consistently deploying and updating proprietary software that determines whether there is a flame war, where people argue heatedly. When these flame wars take place (which Graham says can often get ugly and personal), the story in which the commenting is taking place is moved further down the page.
If I had to guess, the flame-war detector may be as basic as the number of comments compared to the number of upvotes. I say this because as of now, the Dart story is #67 on the list with 99 points and 127 comments and 13 hours old. While at the same time, story #39 has 97 points, 62 comments, and is 16 hours old.
I bring this up because I feel like a lot of people from within the Dart community (be it people on this list or Google employees) were jumping to defend every criticism in the comments. And I feel this ended up leading to a lot of discussions about Dart, which is a good thing, but it is not good for the ranking of stories. I know I was quick to correct anyone that misspoke about the language, so I probably didn't help any.
I just wanted to say, when stories do appear on the HN front-page, we as a community should definitely try to get a clear picture of the language across for those that read the comments (and I think there was some great discussion in the comments of this article). But at the same time, we should make sure to not go completely overboard correcting people.