Case Study of Bungie.Net
nmb3000 writes "MSDN recently put up a case study of Bungie.Net (much more detailed than a previous one), the homepage for the creators of the Halo series, and its transition from Perl to .NET and ASP. From the study: 'The Bungie.net site is the online companion to the wildly successful Halo 2 video game for Xbox, released in November 2004 by Microsoft. The site also acts as the community hub for all things related to Bungie games. Built with the Microsoft .NET Framework, Bungie.net serves up more than 4 million pages per day, accumulating 300 gigabytes of online game statistics per month from more than 1 million games played daily.' This is an interesting look into the creation and integration of the very large and interactive website which was voted 'Most Innovative Design' by IGN Entertainment in 2004."
I guess it's innovative to not render properly in Firefox.
Blame FireFox-- it's the one rendering it slowly. These bugs have been known about for quite some time:
8
0 7
Fixed background makes scrolling painfully slow
https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=9019
slow scrolling in pages with position:fixed elements
https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=2013
Yay!
Not All Who Wander Are Lost
I'm disappointed that I was moderated as a Troll, when I was not trolling.
Although I was too brief before, let me expand on other reasons on why the front-end design is poor:
The design isn't god-awful, but it could use a lot of work. It was clearly designed initially with flash over function, and that hurts the it in the end.
"BEHOLD, CORN!!" - Dr. Weird, ATHF