As the subject line says.
Over the past few weeks I've compiled a handful of both general and specific tips/tricks/hacks concerning my uploading habits; they vary from maintaining feeds, detecting revisions quickly and efficiently, getting push notifications from sites that typically don't allow you to get them, seeing deleted posts from sites that typically don't allow you to, viewing older versions of posts that are revised, viewing hotlinked images, fetching images on sites that disable Javascript or have deceptive sample sizes... Things like that. I've discussed it in private with a multitude of other users (namely Randeel), and I think doing this much would lessen the barrier of entry to uploading and increase the general quality of the gallery as some users find it easier to upload good content without expending a lot of wasted effort.
I want to note that it will contain some exploits, however, but all of which are permissible. There's nothing "underground" about these or the like; all of these tips I'm compiling together are either usable as is or use scripts/tools/extensions/applications/etc that are all public and easily accessible.
Now I could "publish" it as it stands, but before anything happens, I'd like to probe the community here over how appropriate such a compilation/guide/handbook would be, and if it should be posted here as a forum post (and in which case could go into the useful threads sticky), relevant information in the site howto's, or even outside the site somewhere such as on a blogpost or public github repo (as a wiki). There could be some downfalls to making some of this public, after all. And although competition for posts may increase, I also hope that it'll lead to a better looking gallery and more contributors that will put the effort in to cover the artists and content that some of us regular uploaders otherwise miss.
Updated