Cache la flèche dans les threads (celle pour aller au post du dessus)
Cache les popups quand on hover un pseudo
Cache les emojis des pseudos (dans les boosts)
Cache l'image de fond sur les profils (qd le flou est activé)
Notification : réglage du padding des icones (boosts, reply, favori, etc) et changement de la couleur des icones de boosts (pour coller avec celle des boosts)
Changement des icônes de : URL, upload, plugin / extension, copie de lien, boost, reply, post public, non-listé, local et message privé
Modification des contours des notes
Modification du label des instances (sur les posts)
Content warning : typo plus grande, majuscule + couleur et contour pour plus de visibilité
Boosts : ajout de dégradé et grain pour plus de visibilité, cache la date et style du boost, déplace le texte de boost vers la gauche
Cache partiellement le post parent d'une réponse
Cacher les séparateurs de date (dans les feeds)
Modifications de fonctionnalités
Cache nos propres boosts, réponses et posts dans les feeds
Cache le bouton boost si une image n'a pas de description
Résolutions de bugs
Possibilité de redimensionner une zone de texte verticalement
One thing I miss from the golden age of #Facebook, when pretty much everyone was on it and kept their #profile up to date, was that it was easy to find how to message someone. When I wanted to contact someone who I hadn't talk to in a while, I just used Facebook. I didn't had to worry that I had a wrong or outdated email address. I could see their profile to make sure it's the right person, and that they had been active recently so my message wouldn't get lost in the void. It was reassuring.
For something like this to work, for people to want to use it and ditch #Google and #Facebook, it would need to provide excellent user experience.
For example: how do we make sure that people keep their profile up to date? This proposed system would be no better than our current #ContactBooks if they are always outdated! This is more than a technical or UI problem. It's a user experience problem!
New blog post on user support frustration, its causes, and how we could build the "infrastructure of equanimity" in #opensource, including ideas for potential cross-project tools & practices.
Shout-outs to @davidism, Heidi Waterhouse, @offby1, @jacob, Nicole Harris, @bernard, + @georgia for work & conversations that I built on in this piece.
🧑🏫 Entdecke neue Möglichkeiten, das Benutzererlebnis durch präzise Lokalisierung und Sicherheit der Ultra-Wideband Technologie zu verbessern und revolutioniere damit alltägliche Interaktionen. Komm zum Talk von Volodymyr Kolibaba auf der #macoun23
Jetzt anmelden: https://macoun.de/anmelden
Filling your timeline on #mastodon as a new user is hard. I was just thinking about a hashtag discovery feature. What do people think about this? (Boosts welcome!)
Hashtags are a great way to get started without having to know specific people to follow. But even if you know what topics you like, it can be hard to know the exact hashtags used by the existing community here.
What about a feature where if you write in a hashtag, it gives you the tags most commonly used with that tag? Useful? #UX
👆 @Brendanjones who are the primary users you have in mind? What is the biggest hurdle to overcome? IMHO the prime challenge is to guide first time users from filling their timeline with what interests them to following valuable hashtags.
The onboarding experience should include this. People already active in social media around their interests will know relevant hashtags. Only then some help might be useful to point out that #UX is more popular than #UXDesign and #UserExperience.
The Apple VisionOS will be the first OS that can tell EXACTLY what features on a web page your eyes are drawn to, in what order, and for how long they linger. It is a user testing dream come true.
If someone isn't making that app, it won't take long.
Say you are on a site with a large paginated list. When you scroll all the way to the bottom there is a link to get the "next/older" page.
At the top is a link to get the "previous/newer" page.
If you click "previous/newer" link would it be weird if the page that loads is automatically scrolled to it's bottom?
I feel weird about monkeying with scroll position, but given that timelines are chonological I think it makes sense?
@ZachWeinersmith see also: Net Promoter Score® (though to be fair, its creator did hype it up as a legit metric before later recanting on his deathbed)
(okay he's still alive but might as well be dead for all anyone listens to him now that his monster's out in the world)
I wrote a little #blog post about my #Calckey complaints - and how I resolved some of them with #CustomCSS. The code is available on the post if you'd like to give it a go.
As a designer/an engineer your most important concern is not what feature to implement next - it's about how a new feature interacts with all other existing features in the system.
Hi @tootapp
On iOS, I use Toot! as my preferred app for Mastodon.
What I miss, however, is the function of being able to swipe to the right from a lower level to get to the level above.
It's too much of a hassle to always click on "<Home" at the top left, as the spot is hard to reach with my thumb.
Is this possible, but have I just not found the function - or is this still being implemented?
Thanks for your answer!
Hey Fediverse 👋 I’m a Lead Product Designer, so I’ll mostly be talking about and following people who are interested in the craft of product design (or whatever we’re calling that discipline this week).
Technology and leading product teams will probably come up a lot too. Let's chat.