Subject: Said I would, so...
Author:
Posted on: 2013-04-12 19:44:00 UTC

As to the benefits of staying here - leaving aside all issues of how the move would be handled or mishandled:

-Instant visibility of all activity in the last 24 hours (you're welcome, by the way - I was the one who found that feature)


That is convenient, but it's gray on white and easy to miss when scrolling. If all you want to scan for is 'new activity', then I think pretty much every board has [NEW] tags next to threads with posts you haven't seen, and icons next to forums with new content. Not within the last 24 hours, but it's even better in the case where you spend more than a day away and want to check on everything that's happened.

-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.

So it's a bit more inconvenient. Something extremely inconvenient and irritating about the system we currently use is how if I want an overview of everything, I have to scroll for what feels like forever. Besides, there's probably some system where you can collapse all posts to subject-line, set it so they're nested, and hunt through the specific thread that way.

Also, quote pyramids. Quote pyramids are your friend.

-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).


I don't have an argument for this. I've never had a problem with forum search engines myself.

-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.

I don't know about anyone else, but I'd happily allow wild wanderings. In my experiences on the Bay 12 Forums in the Dwarf Fortress section, threads regularly go wildly a-wandering. The mods really only get involved if the discussion gets flamey.

-Instantly visible notes at the top of the page, rather than sticky threads. The current header is a lot harder to ignore.

I've seen boards with that. It's a news header at the top of the main page.

-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..."

There's artificial divisions, and then there's sorting things into like-with-like so you can, say, more easily check out all the Permission requests if you're like me and wanted to see what exactly passed and didn't. Or if you want to check the Roleplay forum to see if anyone's done your idea before.

Also, I'm not sure what tech the BZPower forums use, but there's a 'most recent 5 topics' thing on the right side of the index page that doesn't discriminate between subfora. It's a bit out of the way, but if we can find something more prominent it might work too. It would probably be even more useful for us, because the PPC moves slowly enough that you can blink and the topics will still mostly be there.

-No-one being told off for posting in the wrong forum.

Are you volunteering for telling-off duty? I know I wouldn't be. Besides, that suggests that it would be finger-shaking reproach, which I don't think is in the cards. Gentle pointers and moving the thread ("There's a specific forum for Permission requests for archival purposes; I've moved your thread there"), sure, but telling someone off for posting in the wrong forum is silly.

-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.

If there's a [NEW] brightened icon next to the Stories forum whenever someone posts in there, then anyone who actually cares would notice that there's something interesting there anyway. Anyone who's so focused on the General forum that they don't check the main page probably wouldn't care much about the stories forum anyway.

-Depending on the forum technology, any of:
--No thread bumping (for reasons described multiple times in this thread)


That's much less of a problem with collapsed threads and the ability to scoot heated discussions into a locked archival subforum if we don't want it going on anymore but would like the history so we don't end up repeating it.

--Multi-threading of discussions, rather than the constraints of single-threading

I know the NaNoWriMo forums at least let you switch between flat and nested replies. Also? Quote pyramids. In this case, they are also your friend.

--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.

I know there are forums that can set whether guests can post or not. Also, letting guests post makes it a lot easier for spambots to screw around, and that's a serious con in my book.

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