(I’m sorry if this comment gets posted multiple times. My African internet connection really sucks.)
Hi. 25 years old, HIV/AIDS worker in Africa, pro-BDSM sex activist in Chicago. Blog at clarissethorn.wordpress.com.
I very rarely comment because comments here are expected to be very well-thought-out. Stating something quick, on the basis of instinct, or without stating it in perfectly precise language seems to me to be dangerous.
Another reason this site has a higher percentage of lurkers is, obviously, because of the account requirement. There’s another related problem, though: there’s no way to have followup comments emailed to you. This means that if you really want to participate in the site, you have to be pretty obsessive about checking the site itself. That’s annoying unless you are very interested in a very high percentage of the site’s output. If, for a given commenter (like me), rationalism is a side interest rather than a major one, then the failure to email comments on posts that I’m interested in—or even responses to my own comments—becomes a prohibitive barrier unless I’ve got an unexpected amount of free time.
You can find follow-ups to your comments by clicking on the red envelope under your karma score. I found out about that by asking—it isn’t what I’d call an intuitive interface.
Thank you, I’m aware of that. But that still requires a person to be a pretty obsessive user of this site. Unless I have a lot of free time (like today), there’s no way I can go back and check every single site where I’ve left comments and see how my comments are doing. At least LW aggregates reply comments to my input, but that doesn’t solve the bigger problem of me having to come back to LW in the first place.
It’s also worth noting that this comment interface is difficult to use in many places with slow/bad connections, like, you know, the entirety of Africa. Right now I’m in an amazing internet café in a capital city; but when I’m at home, I sometimes can’t comment at all because my connection is too crappy to handle it. I don’t get the impression that LW is very concerned with diversifying its userbase, but if it is, then a more accessible interface for slow connections would be important.
I’m not a technician—so I’m not sure. But I have noticed that I pretty much always seem to be able to leave comments on Wordpress blogs, for example, whereas I frequently have trouble here and sometimes at Blogspot as well. It helps not to require a login, but Wordpress seems to function okay for me even when it’s logging me in.
So the problem is something about getting to post at all, not the design?
I’ve noticed something mildly glitchy—a grey warning screen comes up sometimes when I refresh the screen, but if I hit “cancel” and refresh again, it’s fine. It’s trivial on high bandwidth, but would be a pain on low bandwidth.
Can you detail exactly what goes wrong when it’s hard for you to post?
(I’m sorry if this comment gets posted multiple times. My African internet connection really sucks.)
Hi. 25 years old, HIV/AIDS worker in Africa, pro-BDSM sex activist in Chicago. Blog at clarissethorn.wordpress.com.
I very rarely comment because comments here are expected to be very well-thought-out. Stating something quick, on the basis of instinct, or without stating it in perfectly precise language seems to me to be dangerous.
Another reason this site has a higher percentage of lurkers is, obviously, because of the account requirement. There’s another related problem, though: there’s no way to have followup comments emailed to you. This means that if you really want to participate in the site, you have to be pretty obsessive about checking the site itself. That’s annoying unless you are very interested in a very high percentage of the site’s output. If, for a given commenter (like me), rationalism is a side interest rather than a major one, then the failure to email comments on posts that I’m interested in—or even responses to my own comments—becomes a prohibitive barrier unless I’ve got an unexpected amount of free time.
Welcome.
You can find follow-ups to your comments by clicking on the red envelope under your karma score. I found out about that by asking—it isn’t what I’d call an intuitive interface.
Thank you, I’m aware of that. But that still requires a person to be a pretty obsessive user of this site. Unless I have a lot of free time (like today), there’s no way I can go back and check every single site where I’ve left comments and see how my comments are doing. At least LW aggregates reply comments to my input, but that doesn’t solve the bigger problem of me having to come back to LW in the first place.
It’s also worth noting that this comment interface is difficult to use in many places with slow/bad connections, like, you know, the entirety of Africa. Right now I’m in an amazing internet café in a capital city; but when I’m at home, I sometimes can’t comment at all because my connection is too crappy to handle it. I don’t get the impression that LW is very concerned with diversifying its userbase, but if it is, then a more accessible interface for slow connections would be important.
What does it take for a site to have a good low bandwidth comment interface?
I’m not a technician—so I’m not sure. But I have noticed that I pretty much always seem to be able to leave comments on Wordpress blogs, for example, whereas I frequently have trouble here and sometimes at Blogspot as well. It helps not to require a login, but Wordpress seems to function okay for me even when it’s logging me in.
So the problem is something about getting to post at all, not the design?
I’ve noticed something mildly glitchy—a grey warning screen comes up sometimes when I refresh the screen, but if I hit “cancel” and refresh again, it’s fine. It’s trivial on high bandwidth, but would be a pain on low bandwidth.
Can you detail exactly what goes wrong when it’s hard for you to post?
Well, it just doesn’t post. I’m not really sure what goes wrong … sorry.