Designer on Slashdot Overhaul Plans 469
EdwardianDandy writes "Web designer Khoi Vinh, whose firm Behavior is responsible for the redesign of the Onion, argues on publish.com that an upcoming contest to overhaul Slashdot's look will yield interesting results, but the outcome will suffer because the underlying architecture is off limits." Normally I don't post stuff "About" Slashdot here since I find meta naval gazing very boring, but this article has many good points about architecture and design, even if his whole premise is based on a contest that we haven't spent more than about 5 minutes thinking about, and is mostly just meant to be a fun way for users to contribute themes to Slashdot. If Khoi wants to enter the contest, we'll consider his designs along with everyone else's. (I'm sure we can't afford him tho). And if he (or anyone) wants to make changes more substantial than cosmetic CSS, I'd consider them too. The upcoming Slashdot Redesign contest is intended to be more about design than architecture, but good ideas are good ideas.
Slash Light (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Slash Light (Score:5, Insightful)
If it's not broke, don't fix it.
Re:Slash Light (Score:5, Insightful)
aren't we the ones who always speak of freedom of choice being such a wonderful thing? ideally, a good default look and a large degree of customisation in the preferences section would make slashdot something that can be pleasing to *every* eye. already now you can switch off just about anything except for the ads.
Re:Slash Light (Score:3, Funny)
Let's test this, shall we?
"I think Slashdot's site should look more like Microsoft's!"
Re:Slash Light (Score:5, Funny)
Only if you're colorblind. If you think that purple color in the Games section is easy on the eyes, I'm sorry, but I think you need to see an optometrist immediately.
Re:Slash Light (Score:4, Funny)
How soon we forget...
Quick, someone post a goatse link.
Good and Bad Site Design (Score:4, Interesting)
If you want to see an example of bad site design, of what Slashdot should avoid looking like at all costs, just look at publish.com, the site on which the article was posted.
Click on the link to TFA, and see what a bad web site looks like:
formatted
in such
narrow
columns
that only
one or
two words
per line
can fit
in the
space
available.
(This is not the same thing as links to other pages appearing within the article text, which is perfectly acceptable.)
There are actually no pictures on the page at all that have anything to do with the article itself.
Contrast this with Slashdot's current layout:
IIRC, you can turn this bar off in your user preferences.
I highly recommend that C.T. not listen to the "pros" and "experts", who seem to be responsible for a large portion of the crap commercial web pages infesting the World Wide Web.
A few other recommendations, not covered in the above:
Also, increase the limit to 160 or higher, but don't allow any more than two or three newlines in a sig.
About tiny fonts (Score:3, Insightful)
Actually, I think it is: comparing the typical Mac fonts (Geneva and the like) with the typical Windows fonts (Arial and the like) at the same point size, they certainly look significantly different to me, with the Windows fonts rendering signific
The Onion layout serves its purpose (Score:3, Insightful)
The Onion is laid out like it is because it's a news parody site. As such, it would make sense to mimic other news sites (CNN, ABCNews, CBS, etc) with a featured story on the left, shorter summaries on the right, nav bar to the far left, and so on.
Re:Slash Light (Score:2)
It seems that the programming community has finally agreed that a small decline in performance is a worthwhile tradeoff for clean, elegant code which is easily reflected in the interface of the site.
And, of course, Ajax and javascript only help to build clean interfaces. Apple's been doing minimalistic interfaces for a long time. The web community cought on shortly after, and even microsoft is
Her own? (Score:4, Funny)
I told you guys! Once we shaped up and went CSS the females would be all over us! I'm talking SKIN!
Re:Her own? (Score:3, Funny)
I never heared about that scripting language.
Anyone done work on this already? (Score:2, Interesting)
Question for oldies. (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Question for oldies. (Score:4, Informative)
The menus and blocks around the content were added later.
Also, now with the css and stuff there are gradients where there weren't.
Overall it still looks the same as in the beginning. Although a bit heavier.
Re:Question for oldies. (Score:3, Informative)
The onion redesign isn't very good (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:The onion redesign isn't very good (Score:2)
At least someone finally pulled their head out of their ass long enough to get rid of all the stupid little Flash section headers.
Re:The onion redesign isn't very good (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:The onion redesign isn't very good (Score:5, Insightful)
A few years ago, some cable news channel (probably CNNfn) decided to put a little stock ticker at the bottom of the screen all the time. A little distracting, but easy to ignore. Then, news channels decided to put a news ticker there. More distracting, and difficult to pay attention to the anchor while reading the ticker.
Then, some genius decided to put TWO tickers, and some other crap on the side of the screen. Headline News is the worst at this that I've seen. Now, every time you turn on Headline News, it's like a bomb went off on your screen. It's completely impossible to absorb all of the information they're trying to throw at you all at once.
This trend toward excessive busy-ness has migrated to the web. On news channels, it's primarily a way to cram in more useless information. On the web, it's primarily a way to cram in more useless advertisements. All of it sacrifices usability.
Re:The onion redesign isn't very good (Score:2)
It's funny you should say that - I thought the people from cable news were blaming the web.
Annoying intro ad at Onion (Score:2)
The onion is unreadable anyway, but I guess that is the trend: Make it unreadable so people will accidentilly click on the ads?
The Onion is dead. Long live The Onion! (Score:5, Insightful)
I wish the ads were only obtrusive... (Score:5, Funny)
The new site is a disaster, and it's all about generating revenue through obtrusive ads.
So a couple years ago I was working in London and I was given a laptop to use by my employer. I decided to download the onion to read offline while riding the train home from work one day. Turns out the page wouldn't render because of a reference to a 3rd-party adserver graphic I hadn't downloaded. To fix it, I opened up my editor and was removing these ad tags from the code. Next thing I know, a man grabbed my laptop off my lab and bolted out of the train.
Apparently, the Onion REALLY wants you to see those ads and has implemented some pretty excessive means of enforcement.
Seth
Re:The onion redesign isn't very good (Score:4, Insightful)
It's another case of a self-proclaimed expert forcing their own perceived expertise on the end-user without bothering to take the end-user into account. I've run into a couple of these. While the good ones can be good, the bad ones lack insight and just move on making the same mistake. Unfortunately, they also have a tendency to move up the corporate ladder.
Re:The onion redesign isn't very good (Score:5, Funny)
When I pulled it up to check out the new design, my first thought was "Huh? The guy who designed this piece of shit is being quoted as an authority on web design?"
Re:The onion redesign isn't very good (Score:5, Funny)
\!!/
-AD-cntnt
cntnt \!!/
cntnt -AD-
cntnt
\!!/ cntnt
-AD- cntnt
What? Who doesn't appreciate the artfull design and delicate balance of subtle content decorted with blindingly colorful and flashy ads?
Re:The onion redesign isn't very good (Score:3, Funny)
Naval gazing? (Score:2, Funny)
Several years ago (Score:2, Funny)
Now the Annapolis Grads are ready to make their move...
Re:Several years ago (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Naval gazing? (Score:2, Funny)
TFA says:
Without the freedom to rethink, for instance, Slashdot's comment threading, or its presentation of search results, or its topic pages, the net effect of a redesign will be considerably less impactful than one might hope forImpactful? That one ... uh ... "word" makes me think I'm not interested in seeing the type of changes the author has in mind for Slashot.
Re:Naval gazing? (Score:2)
I don't know why you say that. Impactful is a perfectly cromulent word.
Re:Naval gazing? (Score:2)
hands off! (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:hands off! (Score:3, Insightful)
The old layout basically had a single column of story headers, so you saw the jokes in a linear fashion. You read one, chuckle, maybe open the story in a background tab, and move on to the next one. In the new layout, I find my eyes d
Re:hands off! (Score:3, Interesting)
What is it with these idiot designers? The web isn't a newspaper, adding ex
Me thinks the articles author thinks too much (Score:3, Insightful)
As I see it, the founders didn't decree anything: There are rules to any contest. And given how much backend work el founders probably wanted to do ( ie: none. If it ain't borked, don't fix it ), this makes perfect sense.
Aha! (Score:5, Insightful)
I realize the debate over homogeneity and efficiency of content/ad presentation is one that will never die, but there's something to be said about the sentimentality attached to site layouts. It's like that old pub you love going to getting remodeled with gear from Ikea or something. There's nothing inherently wrong with it, but it also doesn't feel right, either.
Re:Aha! (Score:5, Insightful)
The first time I saw the redesigned site I was really confused. Trying to sort the ads from the stories in a page that looks like it's in the middle of rush hour!
Please slashdot! Don't let that guy anywhere near your site!
Not a nub. (Score:2, Insightful)
so.. (Score:3, Interesting)
Re: (Score:2, Funny)
Navel-gazing (Score:4, Interesting)
This brings many things into sharp focus. Lack of ethical caching of small sites. Lack of basic story duplication review. Lack of basic grammar review. Lack of basic journalistic fact-checking. Troubling comments that charge karma backlash to those who defy the editors. Lack of awareness that Slashdot is expected by its subscribers and would-be subscribers to behave like the professional corporate concern which it is, and not an unpaid hobby blog which it may have been in the distant past.
Come on, Taco. Some regular "navel gazing" is how things improve over time. Is Slashdot worth so little to you?
Re:Navel-gazing (Score:5, Funny)
Guy works hard, wants to slip out early, watch some cool ships sail around, what's the problem?
Huh?
Re:Navel-gazing (Score:2)
Yes, its worth so little to him.
Re:Navel-gazing (Score:3, Insightful)
I think most of the issues people have with Slashdot have nothing to do with the design, but rather the underlying mechanics that run it.
The CSS upgrade was a great idea, if long overdue. An upgrade to the professionalism of the site owners is also long overdue.
No this isn't a personal attack on the editors; rather it is a challenge to them to improve Slashdot by paying closer attention to the important details that the parent so thoroughly pointed out. Slashdot is good; but they ca
Re:Navel-gazing (Score:5, Insightful)
They give a valid reason for not caching all the links. Your UID is low enough that I expect you know about the FAQ [slashdot.org]. Did you know that they address this [slashdot.org]?
Lack of basic story duplication review.
There's an open invitation [slashdot.org] to solutions. As it is, though, a lot of "dupes" are really followups, or revists to old subjects from years past.
Lack of basic grammar review.
They have a copy editor [slashdot.org]. At the very least, that's "basic."
Lack of basic journalistic fact-checking.
Slashdot is a meta-news site; They don't originate much content. However, they do (usually?) follow links before posting a story, weighing it against what they know. At the very least, that's "basic."
Besides, I've seen worse out of "respectable" news media.
Troubling comments that charge karma backlash to those who defy the editors.
Obviously you don't really care, or you wouldn't have posted.
Lack of awareness that Slashdot is expected by its subscribers and would-be subscribers to behave like the professional corporate concern which it is, and not an unpaid hobby blog which it may have been in the distant past.
You're right, it's no longer an unpaid hobby blog. It's now a paid hobby blog. Slashdot was most likely bought to provide additional customers for commercial services.
Personally, I think you're taking it too seriously. Slashdot was bought because of what it was: A popular tech community with a huge potential audience for tech ads. Changing the community risks alienating the audience, regardless of whether you think the changes are for good or ill.
Re:Navel-gazing (Score:2)
Rather the reverse I think. All the things you've sited are not likely to change.
Why? Advertising.
Dupes bring eyeballs(you never see the low commented stories duped only the big ones). Not checking facts invites the flame wars, trolling, and grammar-Nazis to all come forth and post. All are eye balls looking at the ads. And such things draw people in to view the flame walls and trolling becaus
Re:Navel-gazing (Score:2)
Let's go for the "retro" look (Score:2)
No Changes! (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:No Changes! (Score:2)
Slashdot's design is scandalously bad. (Score:5, Interesting)
If Slashdot were a person it would wear taped together glasses, a pocket protector and floods.
News for nerds indeed.
Slashdot software broken, bans entire subnets (Score:5, Informative)
Due to excessive bad posting from this IP or Subnet, comment posting has
temporarily been disabled. If it's you, consider this a chance to sit in the
timeout corner . If it's someone else, this is a chance to hunt them down.
If you think this is unfair, please email moderation@slashdot.org with your
MD5'd IPID and SubnetID, which are "fbc83eaaddf909965a32494c3cf14021" and "
0681b6883c7b099b59889c08cb34313a" and (optionally, but preferably) your IP
number "68.xxx.xxx.xxx http://68.xxx.xxx.xxx/>" and your username "SumDog".
So I emailed them telling them the problem. I was a subscriber, with decent Karma and I don't troll (although I bet this will be modded as a troll sadly). The response I got was:
> On 10/17/05, Robert Rozeboom wrote:
>>
>> It looks like you share this subnet with a troll, sorry.
The next day, I am still unable to post from home. I have to ssh into work and use lynx to post a comment. I e-mailed him again and got this response:
I;m sorry but I can't unblock your subnet.
Again from Robert Rozeboom. I actually support slashdot, bought a subscription (yea I know it's only $10) and I can't post from home because someone who uses a Comcast cable modem is a troll?! What the fuck?!
They don't bother to check the individual user, but instead ban an entire sub net. There were several comments I wanted to post yesterday but couldn't, because I didn't want to sit with a damn ssh terminal in lynx retyping my user name and password for each comment (I had cookies turned on in Lynx, but it didn't remember my authentication).
If I had done something wrong, I could understand. If there was some way I could fix the problem I would. But even if I unplug my cable modem and get a new IP, it will still likely be on the same subnet. I can't change providers, I don't have DSL or any other broadband in my area (not to mention the reconnection and setup fees are insane unless they're running a special offer)
Before slashdot worries about polishing up the look and feel of their site, they should go back and fix underlying problems with the code, maybe even add spell-check and require users to type in words from images (a.k.a reverse turing test) to prevent abuse from bots.
Re:Slashdot software broken, bans entire subnets (Score:4, Insightful)
It's just typical hypocrisy from the editors when they bitch and scream how DRM technologies annoy and frustrate legitimate fair users, while the piracy will still go on. It's exactly what slashcode is doing now. Their filters, timers, bans, blacklists have been expanding all the time, and entrapping more legit users every day. Meanwhile, trolling, and crapflooding still exists.
Subnet bans are ridiculously amateurish with all the different proxies real trolls can use. And don't get me started with their idiotic comment filters. Talk about kiddy stuff.
Re:Slashdot software broken, bans entire subnets (Score:5, Insightful)
You subscribed to a paid service but you can't get the free part of it. How lame. I'm sorry, but they don't deserve to have your money anymore. You should ask for a refund.
I'm not trying to pick on Slashdot here. I'm being fair. Even if there is a technical problem, you owe it to your customers to be direct and accommodating about it. I know this is an isolated incident, but this is no way to run a business. It's completely unacceptable and unprofessional.
Re:Slashdot software broken, bans entire subnets (Score:2)
It's completely unacceptable and unprofessional.
You must be new here.
This is not an isolated incident (Score:3, Informative)
I have a subscription, I get downmodded for my "unpopular" views unfairly at times, but the majority of them are just fine. My karma is still Excellent! so wtf?
They better start changing some of the ways things work around here... I had to use an "other" isp, my
Re:Slashdot software broken, bans entire subnets (Score:5, Insightful)
Why not allow registered user accounts to post regardless of IP/Subnet bans? And if the User Account is used to spam/flood/troll ban the account. That way, the IP/Subnet ban will block AC's from posting crap, the user account bans will block spam accounts, and valid users will still have full access. It doesn't seem like rocket surgery to me.
-Rick
Re:Slashdot software broken, bans entire subnets (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Slashdot software broken, bans entire subnets (Score:3, Funny)
-Rick
Re:Slashdot software broken, bans entire subnets (Score:3, Insightful)
If they have a userid and password, the logic to block a subnet to AC's but leave it unblocked to accounts older than the block, or at least paid subscribers should not be difficult.
It might even attract paid subscribers, imagine that!
Re:Slashdot software broken, bans entire subnets (Score:2)
Re:Slashdot software broken, bans entire subnets (Score:2)
A captcha (perhaps of a differnet form - dare to be creative) could be interesting, but it's already in use for posting when not logged in...
O
Re:Slashdot software broken, bans entire subnets (Score:3, Funny)
This happened to me. I couldn't post to Slashdot for about a year - I think anyone using Telefonica in Spain was banned, which is pretty much anyone in Spain. I emailed Slashdot about it but got no reply.
Actually I was pleased because it stopped me wasting so much time posting rubbish to Slashdot. Damn you Slashdot for banning me! And damn you for not banning me now!
Re:Slashdot software broken, bans entire subnets (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Slashdot software broken, bans entire subnets (Score:3, Interesting)
Instead of complaining about it here why don't you write a nice snail mail letter to Slashdot's parent company [ostg.com] explaining the situation, that you are a paying customer, and that you are not happy. Things will only change if the parent corps management is made aware that they are pissing off custom
Horrible changes so far: (Score:2)
Oh, and the reply box is too tall now. Why have the Name and URL info on separate lines? Hell, even displaying the URL info in the reply box makes no sense: I know what site I put in there, why bother displaying it?
Re:Horrible changes so far: (Score:5, Insightful)
Rollover effects aid usability by giving instant visual feedback the moment the user can activate the link. It has the greatest effect on people who aren't that comfortable using the mouse (newbies, people with arthritis, etc), but it affects everyone to some small degree.
Not true. I can spend all day listing stupider things that people do.
Why the special attention to the underline? The user already knows it's a link, they've already navigated to it with the mouse and are geetting ready to click it. It's not the same as removing the underlines when you aren't hovering over the link.
Re:Horrible changes so far: (Score:3, Interesting)
Dynamic threading (Score:2)
Why is the architecture off limits? (Score:2)
Why is the architecture off limits?
Load quickly, read easily, & colour changes (Score:2)
Make the page load quickly, it should be easy to read and possibly have the ability to change colours randomly or manually. Maybe have a scheme where the background is black and the text is yellow/green/white?
The top and left menus may need to be overhauled with more concise headers and more descriptive subsections.
Maybe have 2 kinds of polls, one is a fun poll and another more scientific poll? Poll on things that might matter such as preferences of computer equipment/brands/confi
Ugh, microfonts (Score:5, Insightful)
They call themselves "the definitive authority on web publishing and print", and yet their own site uses teeny tiny 10px fonts? Free clue: design is about balancing form and function. When you use tiny fonts, you sacrifice function. If you forget the balance, it's not design, just art wanking. A 10px font size for the main body of text is not acceptable for something to qualify as well designed.
Re:Ugh, microfonts (Score:2)
I don't know of any browser that doesn't let you change your default font size.
Hell, if you have a scrollwheel on your mouse, you can change font size in Firefox by holding CTRL and scrolling the wheel...
Re:Ugh, microfonts (Score:2)
Re:Ugh, microfonts (Score:3, Insightful)
It doesn't use your default font size. It uses 10px font size. I already pointed that out twice, and you even quoted it.
Good design doesn't make end users fix the page. Hell, even barely average design doesn't make end users fix the page.
Meta navel gazing is exactly what's required (Score:5, Insightful)
The ASCII-goatse guys need to be IP-banned for life. The GNAA guys need to get a life. The "overrated/underrated" metamod loophole needs to be closed. Storys need to be checked for duplicates, at least a week back. Summaries should summarize. Third grade rules of grammar and spelling should be observed in summaries. Storys should be assigned to the category they belong to. Corel cache links should be supplied for sites that obviously can't take the strain - particularly if they have shown that they can't in the past. Roland Pipaquele (sp) and the Amazon recommendation link trolls should be executed. Storys should be accepted/rejected in a timely manner, and we shouldn't be seeing people posting "I submitted this 20 hours ago, and was rejected".
I could go on, but I'm sure I've said enough already to be scored a troll-for-life, so I'll quit now.
Re:Meta navel gazing is exactly what's required (Score:2)
It's the Iron Law, not hypocrisy (Score:3, Funny)
It's still a good point. A spelling error can jolt some people just as badly as a ringing telephone interrupting a coding session.
A small nit which made me wonder (Score:2)
When you click reply, the comment is shown again above the input textbox, which still makes sense.
Below the comment, there's one link. And this link says: reply.
Now why should I want to use the reply link, when my reply form is already right before my nose?
Noreover, why remove the link to parent (which, unlike the reply link, I actually would use from time to time)?
Not that it's a big problem, not clicking a pointles
onion redesign it horrible. (Score:2)
It's not just that people are used to the old and are mad that it changed, it's that the new design really really sucks.
Good work Khoi (Score:5, Insightful)
Anyway, regarding TFA, that was the biggest load of "Web Designer" horse crap ever shoveled into HTML. Slashdot has been ASS UGLY since 1997. Yet, it's been hugely successful. Why is this? Gosh, it COULDN'T be because of the CONTENT--could it? Not only has Slashdot continued to provide what it's here to provide, it's remained remarkably stable, UI-wise.
"Rethinking" the architecture is daft. Slashdot has a codebase built to encourage good comments and hide bad ones, but to accept everything that's not scripted spam. That's the architecture. "Rethinking" that is like "rethinking" the design of the nuclear reactor in a submarine while crusing at 20 knots 800 feet down.
Please keep your Web Designer hands off Slashdot, thanks.
Ignore him! (Score:5, Funny)
*bdumTSH*
one suggestion (Score:2, Insightful)
design vs architecture (Score:3, Insightful)
I wanted to pay a guy back by waiting till the end of the project and then saying 'I have some ideas about the fonts' but I'm too nice (lazy)
Fetures I would like to see. (Score:4, Interesting)
Secondly being able to edit your posts after you post it for spelling and grammar mistakes and just have the gammar nazis just send you a private message with the spelling and grammar mistakes for you to change if it makes sense.
Third More moderation options with different values. Like Over and Under Rated should have 1/2 point taken because it slips threw the meta moderation.
Common non moderators can put points on a message to so moderators can see what other people like or dislike and they can make a decision based off of that.
Moderators should know what metamoderators did to their moderation so they can reevaluate their actions.
Mod points shouldn't have a limit (while karma does) but the amount of moderation should go up logarmithicly. So you can get moderations of 6 and 7 but the higer it goes the more moderation it will take to get that high.
Over and Under rated messages should not be an option for unmoderated messages. Because they were not rated.
The point of most of my suggestions is to incorage positive posting and not rusing to get first posts early. Many time the comments are worth more then the stories but they are treated like they normal static to them.
Design should stand back. (Score:2)
I'm sure we can't afford him tho (Score:2)
Which is why you are going to make it a "fun contest" for your readers. That way you get a new design for the price of one subscription/t-shirt (that was also designed by a reader who didn't get paid. Money, that is).
Navel gazing bad - but self-examination good (Score:5, Insightful)
Being so focused upon your navel that you DO NOTHING about it is bad. But stepping back once in a while and saying "now, how can I make things better - anybody have any good advice", then implementing that advice is the only way to improve.
For example - what if you added extra CSS classes to comments, reflecting the moderation adjectives applied and the moderation level - such as
<li class="comment, level_5, karma_bonus, insightful, interesting, overrated">
Then, without a server fetch, I could change my displayed comment threshold just by changing my CSS. Think about how much savings the
You could even add the zoo modifiers, then I could have my friends posts highlighted by changing the background, again, without a server fetch.
In short, Rob - if you put more of the information the back-end has into the generated HTML, then that would increase the amount of cool stuff WE can do at the browser end.
Re:Navel gazing bad - but self-examination good (Score:4, Insightful)
I certainly like your suggestions, but I'm not sure how this would cut down on bandwidth. I read at a comment threshold of 3, which seems to drop 4/5 of the comments/trolls. If slashdot implemented this moderation level css classes AND sent every single comment per article, letting the user's CSS sort out the viewing threshold, I think this would actually result in a much higher bandwidth usage.
I still think the class idea is great though. You could pretty easily construct visual cues about the funniness of a post or the moderation level by using your own stylesheet. I'd probably use something like a color shade that gets progressively more saturated as the moderation level got higher, or I'd set up a sheet that just showed me +5 funny posts.
Is he being Khoi? or will he be Vinh-dicated? (Score:2)
So what? This shouldn't be a problem. In fact it should be a good thing. Is he still in the last century? Hasn't he heard of webstandards? A good website will have have content separated from presentation. I don't know if slashdot has that kind of separation, but it should. Anyway take a look at CSS Zen Garden [csszengarden.com] for examples.
ALL HAIL THE WEB SEPARATIONISTS (Score:2)
Having recently overhauled the site's markup to conform to HTML Strict 4.01, Slashdot has now achieved a more or less clean separation of form and content. And thanks to the well-advertised wonders of CSS, it's now possible for any enterprising designer to develop a new, production-ready (or nearly ready) 'skin' for the site completely on her own.
I will not tolerate another web design article--especially not one that's going to lecture me about underlying architecture--when it starts with a paragraph li
Re:ALL HAIL THE WEB SEPARATIONISTS (Score:3, Interesting)
What's wrong with the Onion's redesign (Score:4, Insightful)
And what a horrible job you did:
1. Smearing ads all over the place. I remember seeing not one, but TWO banner ads toting NBC's "The Office" on the same page. you know, in case we didn't see the first one. It's IGN or *insert video game news site here* bad.
2. The oh-so-classic time-honored tradition of putting ALL the links humanly possible on the main page. If i have to hit Ctrl+F to find something obvious, there's something wrong.
3. Very little new content. A lot of the bottom of the main page is just links to older content, none of which is available to free users.
4. Inconsistent overall look compared to the older site.
Can websites jump the shark?
I submitted this back in August... (Score:3, Interesting)
I have found my self wondering of late whether or not the Moderation system of Slashdot (meaning, this site in particular, as opposed to the underlying implementation in Slashcode) would be more effective if a few changes were made.
For instance, it seems to me from my own experience, that readers are more likely to post in stories that cover a field in which the reader may have a particular expertise, yet the moderation system disallows those same posters from moderating any posts under the same topic. Would it not be more effective to allow moderation to all posts but one's own? Why isn't the moderation system open to all logged in users at all times? Why are we limited to five moderation points at a time? Why is the moderation scale limited to -1 through +5? Why are we limited to single point changes?
Personally, I have my preferences set to display +4 and above, and most of my own moderation tends to be downward, as I personally feel it is of more value to the community for me to down-mod those posts which I feel do not deserve a 4 or 5 rating. I take my moderation very seriously, and I do not mod on a whim. In fact, many times when I am awarded moderation points, I end up allowing them to expire because I do not feel any affinity for the topics currently being discussed, I do not possess enough expertise in the topics being discussed, or I want to particpate in a debate. Again, those discussions I join tend to be those in which I have particular interest or expertise, and I suspect that many posters here would tell similar tales.
I submit that changing the moderation system to -2 to +10 would result in a more accurate characterization of the relative quality level of the posts I see. I also think that we need a "-2, Incorrect" moderation type for posts that contain information that is just downright wrong, and perhaps a "+2, Definitive" moderation type for stellar examples. Perhaps other new moderation types would also help. Could we not open the moderation to all users at all times and do away with the five points at a time limitation by simply not allowing a particular user to moderate a particular post more than once?
I've read the FAQ section on moderation many times, and it still leaves me a bit disappointed. As a 5-digit UID Slashdotter (just a little way over 15 bits at #33785), I've seen Slashdot go through many different phases, and I'm wondering:
Where does the Slashdot community stand on these issues in 2005?
Re:Why Have A Contest At All??!! (Score:5, Insightful)
It may be a business, but they're the keepers of this community. If they lose their way and get all evil and shit, Google will start their version and all us fan boys will run over there instead to bad mouth MS and warn everybody about the latest Firefox hole.
Re:Should have used XML + XSLT... (Score:3, Insightful)
No. XML is a set of syntax rules, not a document format itself. When people say "XML" when the context implies a document format, they invariably mean "an ad-hoc data format I've just made up on the spot that uses XML syntax". It's meaningless data. <myspecialheading> means nothing to anybody but you. Everybody knows what <h1> means though. Do Google apply XSLT? Do all browsers? No and no. They are left with the
Re:user css (Score:2)
All Slashdot needs to do is put something like id="slashdot" on the <html> element. Most browsers support user stylesheets - you just tell your browser where to find your user stylesheet, and it does the rest. You can put things like #slashdot body { background: blue; } or whatever in it. At least Mozilla, Opera, Konqueror and Internet Explorer support this, I can't remember whether Safari does too. Some browsers offer selectors that even does away with the requirement for the id attribute - e.g.