It does not favor small changes/features. People are not going to vote for them, not because they don't want them, but the benefits are small. The developer will probably misjudge the community needs for small changes/features.
You're making the assumption that more votes means it's more likely to happen. That's not true -- I judge the number of votes relative to the amount of work it would take to implement, and also factor in my own opinion of the item and how it fits into WarLight's overall direction. If you go to the UserVoice forum, look at completed items, you'll see there are items that got done with very low votes.
Thanks for your clarification. It is good to know the number of votes is not the deciding factor.
So you still need to open a thread to advertise your idea anyway. :P
Honestly all this does is skew the numbers. I try and use UserVoice as a way to see what the community wants, but if some ideas are advertised on the forum and others aren't it makes my job harder since it means that UserVoice votes are no longer a fair assessment of what people really want, since those ideas got more exposure than others. I factor this in, too, when examining the numbers.
Well I think you could put it in a positive way. If someone cares so much about that idea and spends time to promote it, it means they really want it. You may view their action and enthusiasm as one extra vote to the idea. ;-)
Getting more exposure is not a bad thing. The number isn't skewed. You can't force people to vote. People don't vote if they don't agree or want it. I would say they are just helping it to reflect its "true value". ^_^
For others who do not get enough exposure, they are most likely "undervalued". You may use your personal judgement to add some values arbitrarily to those ideas. ;-)
Status: Ignored for about 3-4 years.
It takes minutes to hours to come up with an idea, and months to years to implement many of them. Not to mention there are thousands of people coming up with ideas and one person implementing them. By definition, most items won't be able to be completed quickly. But if they're still good ideas that I'd like to do some day, what would you suggest doing with them? Closing them isn't really fair since they're good ideas, and I'd still like to know how many people want them and if I close it then it can't be voted on.
I don't think he deliberately delays implementing them, but he has a life, and there are many good ideas around. Programming is not something as simple as it looks. Users usually way underestimate the time required to code some feature.
Edited 9/30/2015 18:56:23