Slashdot Mirror


Designer on Slashdot Overhaul Plans

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.

12 of 469 comments (clear)

  1. Slash Light by (1+-sqrt(5))*(2**-1) · · Score: 5, Insightful

    A small request: whatever we finally decide to do, let's keep Slash Light.

    1. Re:Slash Light by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      One major thing that brings me back to slashdot, is how easy it is on the eyes. You aren't assaulted with multiple columns of content or gaudy, interleaved ads. It's right to the point, top to bottom. The front page of the onion looks like a bomb went off in the middle of some content. You have stories all over the place. Slashdot also isn't like other tech news sites where you have 20% story, %80 related links or other fluff. It's story, user reaction. Given that most of the site's content, and the whole idea of the site is based on community, anything other than a chronological top down design would ruin what slashdot is.

      If it's not broke, don't fix it.

    2. Re:Slash Light by koekepeer · · Score: 5, Insightful

      i think this argument is posed a little bit too black and white.

      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.

  2. hands off! by DustyCase · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I hope this guy keeps his hands off of /. because the new Onion design gives me a headache. Swapping a clean, streamlined design for a USA-Today ripoff isn't my idea of progress.

  3. Aha! by Zaffo · · Score: 5, Insightful

    So he's the one responsible for befouling my precious Onion.

    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. :(

    1. Re:Aha! by Nqdiddles · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Just doesn't feel right at all anymore.
      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!

      --
      And that kids is how I met your mother.
  4. Re:Why Have A Contest At All??!! by going_the_2Rpi_way · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Notice all the "we"'s in the replys. People feel like they own or are a part of Slashdot. You can't buy that kind of loyalty and letting stakeholders play a role (or think they're playing a role at least) in determining the direction of the site is a small price to pay.

    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.

  5. Re:The onion redesign isn't very good by froboy · · Score: 5, Insightful

    "isn't very good" is a kind, kind way of putting it. It went from a simple and easy to navigate site to an overgrown mess in the course of a couple months. One of the greatest tragedies of moden web design is the endless need to make sites more complicated and seemingly "busier." A vast majority of what I see on webpages could be just as effective with simple HTML rather than the mess of flash/java/shockwave, etc... that is needlessly being thrown around these days. I agree that it is time to shake things up a bit here at slashdot, I only hope that the powers that be opt to stick with a relatively simple design so that content does not get mired down in window dressing.

  6. Meta navel gazing is exactly what's required by $RANDOMLUSER · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Why aren't the simplest things to improve the site even considered?
    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.

    --
    No folly is more costly than the folly of intolerant idealism. - Winston Churchill
  7. Re:Navel-gazing by Short+Circuit · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Lack of ethical caching of small sites.

    They give a valid reason for not caching all the links. Your UID is low enough that I expect you know about the FAQ. Did you know that they address this?

    Lack of basic story duplication review.

    There's an open invitation 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. 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.

  8. Navel gazing bad - but self-examination good by wowbagger · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Rob - you are right that "navel gazing" is bad. But looking down and saying "Dayum - I need to lay off the beer and do some sit-ups" is not.

    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 /. servers could see from that.

    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.

  9. Re:Slashdot software broken, bans entire subnets by RingDev · · Score: 5, Insightful

    "The "you share a subnet with a troll" was pretty direct. As for accomodating, you have to consider the big picture. What's better, to lose half the users due to crapflooding, or lose a handful as collateral damage while blocking bad apples?"

    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

    --
    "Most people in the U.S. wouldn't know they live in a tyrannical state if it walked up and grabbed their junk." - MyFirs