Subject: Dissection
Author:
Posted on: 2013-04-13 11:59:00 UTC
Throughout, I intend to ignore minor appearance tweaks (such as Lilac Lielac's comment about gradients, and the lack of the big red bars in the header). The one I will highlight is:
-Tray-Gnome has expressed concern about the large amount of whitespace on the current Board, and has (possibly?) indicated that this is a problem lots of people have. TomashBoard (hereafter T-Board) has the same potential problem.
Other than that, let's get to it. I'll start by working down my original list of 'benefits of The Board'. Please note: When I say there is 'no indication' (or whatever) of which of several alternatives is the case, I'm saying I can't tell from the screenshot. This is a request for clarification, not a statement that something is unworkable because you can't tell what it is.
-Instant visibility of all activity in the last 24 hours
I see a 'New' tag floating around in one image, but no indication of when it pops up (or when it vanishes). Possibilities appear to be:
-> Flags the most recent post (but that would be ridiculous)
-> Flags your most recent post immediately after you make it (ditto)
-> Flags everything posted since you last logged in (which, assuming you don't have to log in to read - and given that a lot of computers drop 'Keep me logged in' - might be less than useful)
-> Flags everything posted since your computer last visited (cookies? This would be like the change in link colour on the Board, and doesn't help if you use multiple computers)
-> Flags everything since a certain time (like the highlighting. This works in general - but isn't a lot of help if you've been gone more than a day!)
-For a thread you recognise by sight, near-instant recognition of not just whether anyone has replied, but precisely what they've replied to. If you need to hunt for the thread, this takes a little longer.
This appears to be the case in Classic mode, but (obviously) not in Modern mode (or whatever it's called). Modern mode has an 'Edited' flag, but again, there's no hint as to whether this is 'Top post edited' or 'Someone has replied'. The same flag shows up in the Classic mode pictures, which implies it's the former. If so, something would be required to indicate when a thread in Modern mode was last edited.
Related to this: I see 'Newest thread' on Modern view. Does that actually collect newest, or most recently edited?
-The ability to spot an individual post, even if you don't remember which thread it's on. This can be done by eye, or by Ctrl-F or its equivalents, rather than through notoriously fickle forum search engines (example: the Minecraft forum search has literally never worked for me).
This is available in Classic mode but obviously not in Modern. I see a Search bar but don't know how it works.
-The ability for discussions in any given thread to wander wildly off-topic without someone telling them they're in the wrong forum for that.
This seems like it would actually be made worse by the dual setup. If someone on Classic mode discusses things in the wrong Modern mode forum...? Yeah. I think if we migrated to T-Board, a rule that 'forums are not rules, only guidelines' would be not just a good idea, but essential.
-Instantly visible notes at the top of the page, rather than sticky threads. The current header is a lot harder to ignore.
This is there on Classic mode, but bizarrely not in a subforum on Modern mode? I think the Constitution, Wiki and IRC are important enough that they should be instant-access from subforae...
-As previously stated, no artificial divisions which could lead to, for example, "What's the point of going into the newbies forum? Nothing ever happens there..."
Alleviated by Classic mode. I'm not convinced this wouldn't be a problem for Modern mode users.
-No-one being told off for posting in the wrong forum.
As stated above. I'm assuming the tags ('Test post', 'Newbie introductions') are the way of putting your Classic mode post into a given subforum. However, I also note they're possible to attach on lower posts in a thread. I'm... really not sure how this works. Do tags elsewhere in a thread than the top post actually do anything?
And - yeah, that 'guidelines not rules' rule is an absolute must for mixed modes. No, moving the thread and leaving a 'friendly' note won't cut it - we have some very fragile newbies at times, and, given the tone of some of the 'You might want to check the Wiki before asking questions like this' replies we've had in the last year or so (specifically, blunt: I was told this was because people are fed up of saying the same thing over and over), I do not believe they would remain 'friendly'.
-Given the extremely slow pace of stories being posted, no-one making a post in the General forum to tell people there's a story in the Stories forum.
Classic mode obviously negates this. Subforum... would depend on whether people save the link to the General forum or to the top page. I still forsee this being a problem, beginning whenever the first person says, "Did you read my story by the way?" "Oh, no, I didn't see anyone had posted one..."
-Depending on the forum technology, any of:
--No thread bumping (for reasons described multiple times in this thread)
I honestly can't tell if this exists on T-Board. One of the subforum posts seems to indicate it does (an 'Edited' - whatever that means - thread has an earlier time than a non-edited post below it), and if so, it should be turned very firmly off. It wouldn't work on Classic mode - again, we've tested this and proved it - and we do not want different modes showing different threads. That leads to exclusionism.
--Multi-threading of discussions, rather than the constraints of single-threading
This does appear to be in place.
--No logins, which encourages new posters, allows access to people on unusual technology (such as cheap phones - I recall Specs had difficulty logging into the wiki - and badly-firewalled computers at places like work), and permits in-character posts.
T-Board requires logins, but allows using a different name to your own. I like the 'JayBird (posted by Huinesoron)' feature (though I wonder if it will cause arguments during the Badfic Game - how well will people disregard the flames if they're attached to a real name?), and wonder if it could be extended to deal with non-logged-in users?
I propose that a 'limited' posting ability - no HTML, say, and a low posts-per-day count (as measured by IP) - be given to non-logged-in users, with the Author field reading 'Lacksidacksical (posting as Guest)' or 'as IP 192.168.0.0)'. This would cover the fears of spambots (because, say, 5 spamthreads is significantly less of a problem than 200), and of malicious HTML (which would be limited to registered users).
Now, some further points:
-HTML limits. It's clear from the posts visible on the screenshots that you have some sort of HTML limiting in place. I have a few questions about this:
-> Is it a 'only these things are allowed', or a 'these things are forbidden'?
-> Does it prevent post-body HTML from spilling over down the thread, or from affecting the working of T-Board (such as buttons)?
-> Does it allow bold/italics in post titles, while preventing them from spilling down T-Board, in the various modes?
-> Does it allow people to do, at a minimum, the things HTML is used for here, specifically bold-italics-underline (font size?), links, embedded pictures, embedded pictures which are also links, and horizontal rules? Tables would be good too.
-Moderator powers. Ignoring entirely the question of whether we should have moderators at all, what is the maximum amount of power a moderator could exercise? I'm assuming some combination of the following (please note: I am not advocating the existence of these powers, just asking if they /do/ exist):
->Variable-length bans (from the screenshot); this appears to be either by username or IP, although I suppose it could be requiring both.
->Thread-locking (from a flag in one screenshot); does this apply only to the entire thread, or is it flexible enough to lock down a specific subthread?
->Post/thread deleting. This appears to be fairly standard.
->Post/thread editing. I'm not sure how standard this is.
->Editing the structure of T-Board. Yourwebapps allows a board owner to edit the appearance, such as the header text, and the colour scheme (such as to cause a blackout, say). This is clearly an ability which someone needs to have, since the header sometimes does need to be changed.
->You tell me. What else can T-Board moderators do? (Actually I see several of these are covered in your draft announcement. Never mind then)
-Where are you planning on hosting this? It needs to be somewhere that is constantly up, stable (we've never to my knowledge actually had the Board disappear and be unaccessible; it would be terrible to move somewhere that did that regularly), and not predicated on any given person staying in the PPC. That means anyone's own server is out, as is anything paid for by one person. I suppose a community fee could cover a paid host, but honestly, that sounds like an appalling idea.
-Are the tags just a way of recording what forum things are in, or are they a set of specific tags, or are they an enter-your-tag-here, or a choose-from-these-or-enter-a-new-one? Each of these has different pros and cons.
-You appear to have a feature whereby the entire text of a post is visible on the 'preview' in a thread. How does this cope with, for example, this post, which is pretty massive? I can foresee extremely long pages within a thread.
-Is there a word-limit for posting? If so, what is it?
-Do you have anything in place to prevent the current 'thread scrolls off the side of the Board when it gets too long'? I imagine this could be done with either a collapsing of subthreads that go too far to the right (although this would reduce readability significantly), or with a very obvious arrow and de-indent. I believe Wikipedia does the latter.
I'm sure there are more points I could raise and questions I could ask, but I've been writing this for three hours on and off and I want to stop now.
hS