Why not treat sorting through many different options as part of the learning process as well?
If you have a well-defined goal, you can almost always at least tell which options work and doesn't work, and then which better or worse.
If someone have a MacOS specific problem, a better MacOS specific solution might get lesser votes because fewer people have experience with MacOS and can try out the solution as most users here are on *nix and Windows.
Better guidance seems better than better scoring. I'm not against "neutral votes" however if people found it useful.
In reply to Re: A case for neutral votes
by chunlou
in thread A case for neutral votes
by dws
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