Often contentious subjects will see people come out of the woodwork who haven't posted in years (literally in some cases!) to say their two bits.
Einion
Also, several of the non-university members have become parents over the same holiday season, and with wee ones in the house, don't have the time for the hobby like they used too.
Oh jeez... that is the understatement of the year. I'm only posting now because the wee nugget is asleep... for now. I got a good painting session in this morning... at 5 am, before I went to work.
But hardly ever in a hobby capacity Exactly!![]()
+++This part of the message does not exist, please ignore. -Illuminati+++Erm, isn't that true of CMON? It certainly is; but there, just like you type below, the feedback is more in your face, you instantly get a notification whenever someone you know does something, even more feedback when someone you know does something to/with your part of the web. The actual feedback you get is utterly pointless when you look at it but it's right there, the instant something happens you -know-, and that's addictive, I guess you could call it a false sense of control.
Here you have to work to get your feedback, there you have to work to get rid of it
Actually I was going to include that in a way, in terms of the younger potential members compared to their versions only about a decade back they're used to a more dynamic instant-update kind of web life, versus this kind of thing.
I'm actually beginning to think that the whole forum thing might be past its heyday.
I'm not entirely sure, but then again, that might just be the "old man chrome" speaking, I myself actually like having an easily accessible database of all the crap I've spewed throughout the years online, you don't get that in those mediums, you type something, you type something else and the first thing is gone basically(I know that's an exaggeration but it's the principle here)
Einion
Aha, feedback loop, get it. Thanks for the details, having barely looked at Facebook I tend to forget what I might have heard of how things work in detail.It certainly is; but there, just like you type below, the feedback is more in your face, you instantly get a notification whenever someone you know does something, even more feedback when someone you know does something to/with your part of the web. The actual feedback you get is utterly pointless when you look at it but it's right there, the instant something happens you -know-, and that's addictive, I guess you could call it a false sense of control.
There are a good few of those (and presumably dozens more that I've seen). I've used a few, and IMO none are not as good as vBulletin and any similar forum software in some fundamental ways.One thing that has occurred to me is that the concept of a forum has largely stood still for a number of years - you have a forum with a number of headings and then people create topics under those headings. I suppose that at some point somebody will sit down and develop a new style/concept of forum that provides the benefits of a traditional forum, but the ease of use and benefits of a social media site - so a top bar notification system, integrated chat, friends list etc (I know some forums have these already, but I mean an integrated set up rather than a bolt on).
One of the things that really might be 'broken' and in need of fixing or re-imagining is actually the browser itself; with widescreen becoming the norm and most pages being of a certain fixed maximum width there's a lot of unused screen real-estate and a single-pane window no longer works as well, and for many people they want something that can really aid them viewing more than one thing at a time... I can feel the weight of sediment coming down on me already, before you know it I'll be fossilized!
Einion
Tell me about it. One thing that has happened recently too (and it's the bane of web designer & developers lives) is that more people are using smart phones and tablet devices to view websites and users expect to have exactly the same experience on their iPad to a computer with 20" widescreen. I think it won't be long and companies are just going to have to accept that you're going to need multiple aspect ratio versions of the same site...