Re: [delicious-discuss] Navigation continued...

2006-02-05 Thread Scott Willsey


On Feb 4, 2006, at 8:20 PM, Chris Lott wrote:


I'm really curious why no one who asks for alphabetical sorting posits
a SPECIFIC use-case scenario. I mean, on the surface I understand why
people ask for this, but then as I think about it I begin to wonder
what the point really is. In the context of this specific request, you
talk about podcast links/links referred to in the podcast. I'm not
sure I understand how alpha-sorting applies. Do you tell people to go
and look at the posts beginning with P? I would expect that, were I
to go to your del.cio.us links, I would find links tagged for your
podcast and with additional subject tags. I would expect to see newer
links first. What SPECIFIC need does alpha sort provide? Or maybe I'm
listening and I know there was a link mentioned that had the word
wikicities in it-- would I go and browse alphabetically for
www.wickicities.com? or the title where the word is probably not the
first word in the title anyway?



People think alphabetically. If they go to a list which they aren't  
familiar with, they want to assign some kind of order to it. Right  
now, it's not clear to someone who isn't entering links on delicious  
what that order is. If I mention MemoryMiner in my podcast, they'll  
probably look for a link title starting with M.  If they can't find  
it, they might then go and look for the tags on the right, assuming  
they know how delicious works or they are fairly with it and don't  
know but grasp the tag concept. Then they have to guess, did I do a  
good job of tagging it and give it tags for mac software  
photography, etc, etc, which would be what they might choose, or  
did I just tag it with photography so they have to find that tag  
and click it?


Don't get me wrong, I love the tagging idea. I just think the  
alphanumeric is going to be handier for someone probably 85 - 90% of  
the time if they come to my delicious links page, know that I talked  
about Logitech AV remotes, and (rightly) guess the link will start  
with Logitech. If I have 10 pages of links as more episodes of  
podcasts take place, it just gives them the option to say, okay, I  
need to go another couple pages to where the L's probably are or I  
can use the tags if I want. Whichever makes the most sense to them.


Basically, it's NOT that hard to do. Your response is along the lines  
of it doesn't have it now so it should always be that way. You  
can't really justify your approach either except that you don't  
understand it. If no one in the world had done any of the things I  
don't understand, we'd still be in caves. I don't accept that response.




I'm NOT Being hostile, I'm honestly curious. When I direct people to
del.icio.us links I tend to do it in these ways:

to a specific link
to a tag

I'm trying to imagine the scenario in which your users will want to
browse alphabetically rather than contextually. I've never once wanted
to sort my links alphabetically, so maybe it's just foreign to me. I'd
either be directing my users to a specific link X, to all links about
Y, or to links associated with the podcast Z--


In fact that's what I wound up doing, is just putting in Episode  
numbers. But that's stupid - because now my numeric tags become part  
of delicious and dilute the usefulness of the tags. Or at the very  
least, they don't contribute anything to anyone else.




At any rate, some specific examples might help make your case. So far
it is pretty abstract and I'm still not seeing the utility.



I never really saw the utility in social apps until I saw things like  
flickr and delicious and other similar apps. Looking at things like  
myspace, tagworld, and others of that ilk sure wouldn't convince me.  
Again, and for the final time, I don't accept the argument that  
because you don't like it, it doesn't make sense for anyone. And  
that's basically the only reason not to do this any of you can come  
up with. If I told my clients that, they wouldn't even bother saying  
goodbye, they'd just be gone.


Bottom line, it's easy to implement, I really don't understand the  
technical reasons an alphabetical ordering of the same list would be  
slower (granted, I don't know anything about mySql but I guarantee in  
SQL Server this is a non-issue), and I have to say, why not? If my  
page of bookmarks was ranked in some way by meaning usefulness, that  
would be one thing, but it's not. It's ordered chronologically, in  
reverse order. Why? Is the last thing I entered more meaningful to me  
than the first? Who made that decision? Not I.




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Re: [delicious-discuss] feature suggestion/request for discussion

2006-02-05 Thread Scott Willsey


On Feb 4, 2006, at 8:30 PM, Chris Lott wrote:



but it seems much better handled by search (efficient) than paging
through a list of links to get to the middle of the alphabet!


Yes... and when they give us the ability to easily search ONLY within  
the current list of bookmarks in an obvious manner to those new to  
the site, and not the entire volume of links ever posted to  
delicious, then it will certainly be a lot less important.


Right now that doesn't exist. The tags are the only way (and are  
indeed a good way) but going back to the Logitech AV remote example,  
unless I put the word logitech as a tag, they'll have to hunt for  
what it might be unless they are familiar with my tags.



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Re: [delicious-discuss] Navigation continued...

2006-02-05 Thread joshua schachter


On Feb 5, 2006, at 12:22 PM, sheila miguez wrote:


* btw, I'm sure someone must have considered list recency and primacy
effects with respect to recall? anything interesting from that which
informs this discussion? e.g. Someone haves a vague feeling that they
saved something, and will possibly remember that it was close in time
or far in time. at least they could partition their data based on this
to do a sort or search, no?


Yeah, but the list really forces the partition to recently and  
everything else


I doubt users can recall i did that a month ago vs i did that  
three months ago unfortunately.


Joshua


--
joshua schachter
[EMAIL PROTECTED]


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Re: [delicious-discuss] Navigation continued...

2006-02-05 Thread Chris Lott
But in the real world, titles just don't often start with their
subjects and the likelihood of an alphabetical search yielding results
is always less than a simple search for the same. If I feel that a
user can't search, I can always provide links that do the search for
them.

As for your podcasts, I wasn't even thinking of having the episode
number, just something to say that this was a podcast link
regardless of episode number. More recent links are at the top for a
reason.

 Basically, it's NOT that hard to do. Your response is along the lines
 of it doesn't have it now so it should always be that way.

I'm not arguing how hard it is to do, I'm saying it is more complex
than just adding an SQL query because there are many other places to
consider the effects of that sorting. That's all, nothing more and
nothing less.

 You
 can't really justify your approach either except that you don't
 understand it. If no one in the world had done any of the things I
 don't understand, we'd still be in caves. I don't accept that response.

No, I UNDERSTAND it, I just think that it would be useful for almost
no one almost none of the time. Unfortunately, the truth is that users
often think they want things that turn out not to be so useful (thus
date-based blog archives, for instance). That's why I asked for
specific examples. Those examples have so for not been compelling (to
me anyway).

What YOU don't seem to get is that there might be people who
understand your request but simply don't agree with your position
regarding its usefulness :)

 Again, and for the final time, I don't accept the argument that
 because you don't like it, it doesn't make sense for anyone. And
 that's basically the only reason not to do this any of you can come
 up with. If I told my clients that, they wouldn't even bother saying
 goodbye, they'd just be gone.

I'm not making that argument-- I'm waiting for a convincing scenario
in which alphabetic listing trumps search or where it even seems
remotely useful. As a user, I am one of the group you are theorizing
about, and I'm not seeing it. The converse of the I don't like it, so
it must not be useful for anyone is your I like it, so it must be
useful for anyone-- neither are necessarily true. They have no
validity in and of themselves.

 It's ordered chronologically, in
 reverse order. Why? Is the last thing I entered more meaningful to me
 than the first? Who made that decision? Not I.

Like a LOT of decisions, this was made by the software designer. Not
every aspect of every interface can be customized. That's just life.
If del.icio.us is so vexing to you, and Joshua doesn't decide to see
it your way, I'm sure you will find some happy alternative. That's the
beauty-- no tool has to be everything to everyone, right?

I do sympathize, though, having been on the opposite side of this kind
of argument (in my case, after much work to get what I wanted it
turned out I was wrong-- we should all be so lucky :), but I'm not
sure that your hostility is helping you AT ALL.

c
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Re: [delicious-discuss] Navigation continued...

2006-02-05 Thread Chris Lott
On 2/5/06, sheila miguez [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 * btw, I'm sure someone must have considered list recency and primacy
 effects with respect to recall? anything interesting from that which
 informs this discussion? e.g. Someone haves a vague feeling that they
 saved something, and will possibly remember that it was close in time
 or far in time. at least they could partition their data based on this
 to do a sort or search, no?

I was thinking about this last night while using another product that
does the familiar today,  yesterday, last week, last month kind of
sorting. I find that a somewhat useful view on a regular basis--
.looking for something I vaguely remember linking a week or so ago.

But beyond that it's all just past-- only once in a great while do I
have a query where the further date-based aggregation would be useful
like I know I linked this IP location tool at etech in March of last
year. Hardly enough to warrant it being a useful feature.

Oh, and the link was Plazes.com :)

c
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