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qgil's Avatar
Posts: 3,105 | Thanked: 11,088 times | Joined on Jul 2007 @ Mountain View (CA, USA)
#1
Please help improving the maemo.org website. We are specifically looking now for ideas to redesign the layout (graphical elements, styles, page designs...)

Ideas about improving the web structure and content are also welcome. And whatever else you think the people in charge of pushing this redesign should take into account.

If you want to make other types of suggestions about the website please use the search to see if there is already a discussion going on. Examples that come to mind are server performance, Extras, bugzilla...

Thank you!
 
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#2
got the task
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qgil's Avatar
Posts: 3,105 | Thanked: 11,088 times | Joined on Jul 2007 @ Mountain View (CA, USA)
#3
Originally Posted by wazd View Post
got the task
???

What do you mean?
 
wazd's Avatar
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#4
Originally Posted by qgil View Post
???

What do you mean?
I mean I'll be glad to help
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#5
How about further categories for games? there are a lot and it would make it easier to find. RPG/FPS/Puzzle/Action etc
 
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#6
maemo.org is not very usable on the NIT. It doesn't detect if a user is using a NIT and act on that; whereas many websites start doing this for the iPhone. If you want to start something similar for the NIT you have to give the right example. I propose you investigate this possibility (I haven't, cannot).

Another issue I have with maemo.org is the mess of the Wiki. It isn't clear right away the data is mostly for the N770. I suggest this Wiki is renamed to N770 Wiki (or 'old wiki') and removed from the main page, to a more obscure place.

The website is also very text-based. While developers are often text-based people (doing kernel development, database development, using CLI), most users aren't. You only want real information being text. Information which keeps reoccuring you want to use pictures of because this way it is saved easier in the human brain. Remember most people are visual people, they don't want to translate text to picture. If you want to attract these people to the maemo.org platform and have them use and/or contribute you need to make maemo.org attractive to them. Take an example of Canola, iPhone, MythTH. IMO it'd be great to extend this to maemo.org (maybe with 2 'versions' of the site but how to do this technically is an interesting obstacle). Therefore, I suggest to use more icons on the webpage. SVG preferably, so they can be easily adjusted and/or reused later. Colour neutral or in harmony with the new maemo logo. I love the new maemo logo btw, definetely has a Nokia feeling. Consider to hire someone to make these icons/pictures.

Some examples & suggestions:

garage.maemo.org -> A garage; this will be the synonym of garage.maemo.org
The pearl -> Simple; a pearl :-) I'm a former player of MTG and I immediately have a so-called Mox Pearl in mind.
Bugzilla -> Squashed bug
Roadmap -> A map, with a road on it.
Lists -> No clue, I'm not going to click on it, but I can assure you the word 'lists' means so much. This is incredibly vague!
Repositories -> CD, or something which resembles 'software' otherwise. Or, even better: the 'Application' icon!! Although this icon also reminds me a bit about a SDK (see hereunder).
Tutorials/Documentation -> these 2 overlap. Book, but the icons should be destinctive of each other. I don't know!
IRC -> Cloud with IRC in it, or a balloon with IRC in it, or simply a balloon (who cares about the protocol used to chat w/each other that can be made clear on the actual page). Rename to 'chat'.
Community -> Several heads of people, in a cirlce, or together, like the 'contacts' icon on OS2008 2nd from left upper corner. Although might conflict with 'IRC'.
SDK -> SB2 icon, or a box with blocks.

Speaking of usability. I'd love to see in profiles a way where people are able to express their experience of a piece of software of the NIT (official & 3rd party). Version of software must be included in the experience though, and authors of the software are easily able to read these experiences in a database. I've worked this out a little in a post of mine elsewhere on this board:

Originally Posted by allnameswereout View Post
It surely is useful (not boring) in Amsterdam. My intention in Amsterdam wasn't to use it as a toy, or for fun. It was meant to be used as an aid instead of using maps or asking people around (luckily people in Amsterdam are nice folks). There are all kind of little and small pearls happening in Amsterdam. They're announced in the paper, and an address is listed. Instead of using a map, I'd use a GPS system instead. Faster and easier. Unfortunately, see the earlier message...

Aesthetically I find Maemo-Mapper not nice. But that is overcomable.

Next I get all kind of problems: cannot get fix easily, the maps aren't preloaded, I cannot find the POI, and the interface has all kind of technical terms I just don't want to know about (yet). I've come to the conclusion Maemo-Mapper is more for power users while I want an application which Just Works (tm). Usability-wise it isn't there yet, at least not for me. Usability is important for me, especially on a device like the NIT. I believe the Maemo-Mapper guys have a lot to learn in this regard. In the meantime I'll stick with what works for me. Out of box experience!!

It all starts when I open the program for the first time. A popup tells me it appears I run the software for the first time, and asks me to read the Help file. That isn't promising. Probably means its complex software. Next I get a configuration popup with 6 tabs. Intimidating. The first one asks me to select my GPS. Instead, the program should have known my N810 has a GPS and by default select this because most people with a N810 want it this way. Because the application doesn't do this I start to distrust its default settings. I check if I have /dev/pgps and yes, I do, so I selected this. The rest I leave intact although I'd like to use Wayfinder's POI database. Then I downloaded a list of repositories. It now defaults to Yahoo. I don't know if I want that. I want the best one available for my country (The Netherlands), no questions asked. I have 8 choices instead. Now I select Google Street because I know maps.google.com and Google Earth a bit and know they are of good quality (although I'm not a fan of Google's privacy policies). Now I see Europe, and its searching for a GPS receiver. I have A-GPS enabled. The icon of the GPS in systray appears and disappears, while the application says searching for GPS receiver. There is a thunderstorm and I'm going to quit using the NIT, leaving the device on. Maybe it has a fix in an hour or so... oh wait, it now gets an error it cannot connect to the GPS server. Maybe if I start Wayfinder first...? Yes, now its establishing GPS fix.

Interestingly, I now notice /usr/sbin/gpsd is running but it says /usr/sbin/gpsd -n -N -F /tmp/.gpsd_ctrl_sock /dev/pgp while Maemo-Mapper uses /dev/pgps. I don't even have a /dev/pgp. My /dev/pgps is a symlink to /dev/pts/0. Something seems very wrong here, but I know the gpsd was started by Wayfinder... sigh

I made a symlink from /dev/pgps to /dev/pgp just to be sure. I also read the manual and made it set to BlueTooth with no furthermore settings. This is totally illogic to me and a prime example of the usability issues this program has!

Just to make sure, I don't know who the Maemo-Mapper authors are, and I certainly don't mean to offend anyone. All I do is express myself in honesty. I do suggest in a more broad sense some kind of way to gather user experiences. I've once read a report about this which was very good. A professor would have GNOME and KDE installed on a standard, user-friendly end-user system. Now, someone would describe their first name, their past user experiences, their employment, their hobbies, and what they use a computer normally for. Next, the user starts to use the DE and writes down on the moment their experience. This includes a lot of subjective aspects like their feelings, their character as person, and so on. Afterwards one is able to read, besides subjectiveness, their experience and you can replay it. You're able to empathize with the user, and you can follow their logic based on the (albeit still limited) facts you know about the user. You can then translate this into a usability report, and feedback to the software. This paper was published a few years ago, and featured on Slashdot.org & OSnews.com. I'd love to see these principles gathered in a project; perhaps similar or contributing to openusability.org. Perhaps there already is such a thing for maemo, but what I also mean is besides a Bugzilla a database which includes usability related issues or even simply experiences. If there are sets of guidelines for such database the raw data can be easier parsed than say a discussion thread.
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GeneralAntilles's Avatar
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#7
Originally Posted by allnameswereout View Post
maemo.org is not very usable on the NIT. It doesn't detect if a user is using a NIT and act on that; whereas many websites start doing this for the iPhone. If you want to start something similar for the NIT you have to give the right example. I propose you investigate this possibility (I haven't, cannot).
UA detection is a bad plan. The way it should be done is to design the website so it works well on a variety of screen and CPU sizes.

This isn't easy to do, but the end result will be a faster, cleaner, easier website for everybody.

UA detection just leads to more brokenness for both groups.

Anyway, I've got some ideas for this, but they'll need to wait until I get back to a real computer (end of August). I may start with a wiki style to mock some stuff up.

Get ready, X-Fade.

/me sharpens his Official maemo.org Team Sharpened Poking Stick.

Last edited by GeneralAntilles; 2008-08-04 at 03:44.
 

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allnameswereout's Avatar
Posts: 3,397 | Thanked: 1,212 times | Joined on Jul 2008 @ Netherlands
#8
Originally Posted by GeneralAntilles View Post
UA detection is a bad plan. The way it should be done is to design the website so it works well on a variety of screen and CPU sizes.

This isn't easy to do, but the end result will be a faster, cleaner, easier website for everybody.

UA detection just leads to more brokenness for both groups.

Anyway, I've got some ideas for this, but they'll need to wait until I get back to a real computer (end of August). I may start with a wiki style to mock some stuff up.

Get ready, X-Fade.

/me sharpens his Official maemo.org Team Sharpened Poking Stick.
True, but I've seen both. Resolution detection was popular back in the end of the 90s already, although also manual. UA detection is an easy hack, and already widely used here and there. The problem is rather: lack of support for less popular devices. Again, if Nokia wishes to set a trend here, they should give the right example. Resolution is detected from the initial HTTP request. It isn't much more difficult than UA detection. No, my issue is rather: do you want to detect this automatically or do you want to use a default with an easy button to switch? One could use remote desktop on a NIT, and then neither the UA string nor the resolution is of much use. I say: lets assume people browse maemo.org from the NIT unless [...] (e.g. they are not using MicroB) and have an easy button to switch to 'normal' mode. There are all kind of 'lists' available of websites which support iPhone; its quite hilarious to me this is necessary. Problem is: regarding manual mode switch, there is no standard. Another option might be to use both. Another solution might be to use both, with UA detection as a safe net for the resolution detection. You can be reasonably sure someone using browser MicroB with resolution 800x480 with OS2008 as OS is using either the NIT, or a clone of the NIT. But do you want to serve people who are using resolution 800x480 with Safari? Or a browser which provides a different experience? How do you know for sure how much of the screen is used for the browser? If I have a widescreen with 1680x1024, I might still have a Windows Sidebar on. That is the issue I have with resolution detection; and I had this back in the 90s too. Not everyone browses full screen. This issue might be small, but its definetely worth taking into account IMO.

Does X-Fade read this thread? Maybe in a chat or Wiki it is easier to brainstorm than on a forum. After chat, summary/conclusions can then be written on forum.
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Last edited by allnameswereout; 2008-08-04 at 04:03.
 

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#9
Originally Posted by allnameswereout View Post
True, but I've seen both.
You're entirely missing the point. UA detection, resolution detection, whatever detection you want, they're all pointless. Well-designed CSS eliminates the need for stupid device-specific designs. A well put-together site can fit in 200 pixels as well as it can in 1920 pixels.

Having a separate design for tablets is a bad idea, because it doubles the workload and pretty much always means the tablet-design will always be behind the desktop one. Besides, we have desktop-quality browsing on the tablets, why not make use of it?

Originally Posted by allnameswereout View Post
Does X-Fade read this thread? Maybe in a chat or Wiki it is easier to brainstorm than on a forum. After chat, summary/conclusions can then be written on forum.
He does, occasionally, but I wasn't planning on brainstorming here anyway. The wiki page on the subject is the correct place for discussion.
 
Bundyo's Avatar
Posts: 4,708 | Thanked: 4,649 times | Joined on Oct 2007 @ Bulgaria
#10
You can make simple design that works on 200px. Anything visiually appealing will not work on both 1920 and 200. On 800 maybe, but not 200.

EDIT: I'm planning to throw some mockups of my ideas if the time permits.
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