Is there something in particular that would get you to actively use the new LessWrong? I would be interested in hearing a specific vision from some of you that makes you excited about using LessWrong.
And I don't want to only limit this to technical features. If there is some kind of state of the LessWrong community, or some kind of norm that if widely accepted would get you excited about LessWrong, then I would love to hear about that.
Examples could be:
"I would actively engage with LessWrong if I had the ability to automatically crosspost my content on LessWrong, mirror the LW comments on my own blog and have moderator right on my own posts"
"I would be excited about engaging with the community more if it would get better at giving feedback to new writers. I am currently trying to get better at writing, but the LessWrong comments haven't been historically very useful for me, and I have mostly felt discouraged after posting my writing on the page."
"I would be excited if there simply would be more high-quality content on LessWrong. If I imagine two to three people like Scott Alexander posting as frequently as he does, then I would definitely participate more."
There seem to be two related problems here: content discovery for old posts without a specific topic; and finding posts on specific topics.
For the former, Less Wrong currently has two mechanisms: the Sequences wiki articles, and http://lesswrong.com/top/ . Neither of these is entirely adequate. The Sequences wiki articles fail to mention some of the best content. /top/ is close, but it's a feature that you can only use once; if you go back a second time, it works badly because you have to click Next a bunch of times before you get to something you haven't already read. This seems fixable! It might be good if LW tracked which articles you've read, in a way that's more reliable/persistent than browser history, and provided a feed of unread posts with a mix of new posts and highly-upvoted old posts.
It seems to me like tags are potentially a good solution here, so long as citizen-editors have the power to create tags and keep them orderly.