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27 votes
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This coastal prefab stands tall above rising sea levels
6 votes -
Where to put buttons on forms
12 votes -
Less human than human: The design philosophy of Steve Jobs
9 votes -
Chart Art Fair – It is time for something new in Danish design says Maria Bruun
3 votes -
Why is there cardboard in Dracula?
5 votes -
A Welsh town will install anti-sex toilets that could spray users with water
12 votes -
The Valve Index Ear Speakers - Research, design, and evolution
11 votes -
The door problem of combat design
14 votes -
Performance matters
7 votes -
The endless, invisible persuasion tactics of the internet
8 votes -
Shade: It’s a civic resource, an index of inequality, and a requirement for public health. Shade should be a mandate for urban designers
11 votes -
Creating Passionate Users: The Myth of "Keeping up"
8 votes -
The gov.uk Design System
7 votes -
How a new logo saved the city of Oslo $5 million a year
8 votes -
Monolithic concrete forms associated with brutalist architecture inspired the interiors of Axel Arigato's Copenhagen flagship store
4 votes -
What do y'all think about the new Twitter design?
It's obviously unfamiliar, but I have to say that I don't think it's that much worse than the one we had before. It does obviously follow the trend of making everything look so much more mobile-y,...
It's obviously unfamiliar, but I have to say that I don't think it's that much worse than the one we had before. It does obviously follow the trend of making everything look so much more mobile-y, but unlike Reddit they haven't really messed with the core display of content - in fact, I'd say the tweets themselves have gotten a bit larger. I've heard that the timeline gets reset to algorithmic sorting every 24h, which is an absolute no-go for me, but I haven't experienced that aspect myself.
Related: I've recently started using Tweetdeck and honestly have no idea why I should ever switch back to the main Twitter feed, redesign or not. Columns, lists, the customisation - it's pretty much everything I've ever wanted. Any tips or opinions on that?
14 votes -
The Mutable Web
5 votes -
Introducing a new Twitter.com - a refreshed and updated website
12 votes -
Architects behind Lapee say pink spiral design could end gender toilet inequality
9 votes -
Sans serif, sans progressive policies: How campaign branding came to be a way for candidates to signal their progressive bona fides without actually having them.
7 votes -
Can ‘pods’ bring quiet to the noisy open office?
5 votes -
The shape of things to come
7 votes -
Jony Ive, iPhone designer, announces Apple departure
18 votes -
‘I think therefore I cycle’: Fifty years of Dutch anti-car posters – in pictures
16 votes -
Level design patterns in 2D games
5 votes -
More shots of Steam's new Library design thanks to a leak
14 votes -
Web Design Work
Hi everyone! Per admin recommendation I'm posting this in comp. I would like to switch Staining The Timbre from a blogspot domain to its own. I can handle the paperwork and whatnot associated with...
Hi everyone! Per admin recommendation I'm posting this in comp.
I would like to switch Staining The Timbre from a blogspot domain to its own. I can handle the paperwork and whatnot associated with the url change, but I would like to hire a web designer to spruce up the joint a bit. Right now I'm using a default theme provided by Blogspot and, while it serves its purpose, it makes the page look like it's run by a high schooler.
It should be a relatively basic project. I don't need anything for commerce set up, or anything I think of as "crazy". Just a very basic blog layout that looks professional on both desktop and mobile (the latter is a little lacking in particular right now). Archive links, Tags, ability to comment on posts, Contact Info, and one that preferably preserves the large-picture format the site currently has; that's about it, aside from being able to create the posts themselves.
If anyone is interested please send me a private message. This is very much still in the quoting phase, but I appreciate any assistance you all can provide me in getting an idea on cost.
Thanks in advance!
8 votes -
The corporate logo singularity: Against the creepy cheerfulness of a thousand smiling san serifs
14 votes -
The Expression Problem and its solutions
4 votes -
The fine art of stopping a flying puck
9 votes -
Recreating iOS 7 designs in Microsoft Word
6 votes -
An interview with Game of Thrones' supervising sound editor about how bird sounds are chosen for the show
5 votes -
Avoiding "health washing" at the grocery store
7 votes -
The Frankfurt Kitchen changed how we cook—and live
8 votes -
To help children learn braille, Lego will introduce bricks designed for the blind
7 votes -
Ligatures in programming fonts: hell no
9 votes -
Froebel’s Gifts
8 votes -
Facebook is redesigning its app and site to put more emphasis on Events and Groups
8 votes -
Center For Humane Technology: A New Agenda for Tech (Tristan Harris)
5 votes -
Hand dryers vs. paper towels: The surprisingly dirty fight for the right to dry your hands
11 votes -
Women suffer needless pain because almost everything is designed for men
18 votes -
End the tyranny of Arial: The big internet platforms use the same fonts and backgrounds. Let’s make it interesting again.
15 votes -
"Ethics" and ethics
6 votes -
Web Design in 4 minutes
26 votes -
Refreshing the VS Code product icon
9 votes -
The design of Apple's credit card
13 votes -
The Universal Design Pattern: "The most specific event can serve as a general example of a class of events."
4 votes -
Comments, bumping, trees. Helping user discovering newer comments.
Suppose you want to participate in an old post with hundreds of comments. You made your fresh new comment, injecting your thoughts and effort into it and hit the post button with hopes and dreams....
Suppose you want to participate in an old post with hundreds of comments. You made your fresh new comment, injecting your thoughts and effort into it and hit the post button with hopes and dreams.
The post is bumped to the top under Activity. Other tilders saw the old post on the top, they are intrigued, perhaps as much as you are and wonder what you can add to the discussion, but they couldn't find your comment.
Why is that?
You replied to a thread with a very old top-level comment.
As Tildes is still relatively new, this isn't much of a issue now, but one that I feel needed to be addressed eventually as the site grows. It is certainly a low priority issue for the time being.
Sort by new only sorts comments by the time when top-level comment is posted, which is an inherent characteristic of comment threads. If my last years of memeing on redditting has taught me anything, it is that a new post gathers the most views in the first few minutes when it was posted (This might be a few days on Tildes).
Bumping helps extend the longevity of a given post if the thread gathers enough attention and discussion value to warrant a comment, but that alone would not alleviate the fact that new comments is seen by less and less people as the post gets older (as indicated by votes). If we want to make high-quality comments seen by more people, we need to make comment age a less limiting factor.
Tildes needs to help its users to discover new comments.
A few solutions come to my mind.
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By presenting comments in a linear fashion like the good old bulletin board does without any hierarchy such that sort by new would truly be sort by new.
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By highlighting ( or whichever other means ) comments that meet certain criteria (Comments that are among the latest 10 or comments that were posted within the last hour, this can vary depending on the activities of the comments)
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I would like to propose a novel solution to this problem by compacting the comment threads to a forest of trees with navigable nodes. This sounds totally outlandish, it might very well be, but its an idea that I think worth sharing.
The editing is rudimentary but I hope the idea is communicated well.
15 votes -
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An interview with a guy who wears the same thing every day
15 votes