You see a post you think is great. You hit the "Thanks" button. That's great and good on you.
What if you don't just agree with the post, but you think that person made a serious point, that will help others?
That's what repping is about. Underneath the poster's name, you'll see an hourglass. Click on it. Put some words in the bar to let the person know why they were repped, and Rep them.
Those reps mean a lot, in most cases. It means that person has given something good, back to our community.
Don't waste your reps. Use them when you feel they are warrented. If someone has a billion little green bars? Either they seriously rock, or it's a BS rep me and I'll rep you back.
To most of us? Those little green blocks mean not a thing. It's sure nice when one is repped legitimately, though. It feels really good.
Click on the "Thanks" button. If it's really good, click on that little hourglass and type in why you repped. Make somebody feel good about their post. It costs you nothing, and it's a nice feeling when you get one.
What if you don't just agree with the post, but you think that person made a serious point, that will help others?
That's what repping is about. Underneath the poster's name, you'll see an hourglass. Click on it. Put some words in the bar to let the person know why they were repped, and Rep them.
Those reps mean a lot, in most cases. It means that person has given something good, back to our community.
Don't waste your reps. Use them when you feel they are warrented. If someone has a billion little green bars? Either they seriously rock, or it's a BS rep me and I'll rep you back.
To most of us? Those little green blocks mean not a thing. It's sure nice when one is repped legitimately, though. It feels really good.
Click on the "Thanks" button. If it's really good, click on that little hourglass and type in why you repped. Make somebody feel good about their post. It costs you nothing, and it's a nice feeling when you get one.