[beta.a-m-v.org] Hey, we're semi-official
- EvaFan
- Joined: Sun Mar 21, 2004 10:25 pm
- Status: (*゚▽゚)o旦~ ー乾杯ー♪
- Location: Somerset, KY
Re: [beta.a-m-v.org] Hey, we're semi-official
Im glad im not the only one who thinks polls are great for community development and feedback. Its a shame this site rarely uses them. Actually I think the only time I've seen them used was when we were deciding how animes would be listed in the catalog, naming wise.
"The people cannot be [...] always, well informed. The part which is wrong will be discontented, in proportion to [...] the facts they misconceive. If they remain quiet under such misconceptions, it is lethargy, the forerunner of death to public liberty. What country can preserve its liberties, if it's rulers are not warned [...] that this people preserve the spirit of resistance? The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time, with the blood of patriots and tyrants."-Thomas Jefferson
- Kaream
- Joined: Wed Mar 18, 2009 9:20 pm
- Location: California
- Contact:
Re: [beta.a-m-v.org] Hey, we're semi-official
Pwolf wrote:Pwolf wrote:The banner feature in it's current state, probably not but using the new banner/video system David has in his version of the site could be used for other content other than just a new video. I have an idea how to make it work and will do some mock ups when I get back from work.Kaream wrote:I also believe you will be keeping the random Banner feature correct?
It's rough (and goes by fast and doesn't have to go from right to left, this can be changed so don't complain about it for the love of god) but it gets the point across... basically the home page banner would cycle through different featured videos and between them a user created banner would show:
http://www.pwolfamv.com/other/featured_ ... _baner.mp4
Personally, I think the user-created banners are a good thing for the site and would like to find a way to use them or at do something similar. My idea expands on the existing system by providing much more real estate for people to work with but also utilizes the current design layout. That said, something like this isn't important at this time.
Either way, this is an example of how you can provide feedback and suggestions without actually doing any code.
Not bad, just needs to be more polished like you said.
Here's my idea that I mentioned earlier: http://organicsearchrankings.net/wp-con ... mepage.png
This method of showing videos is much more efficient since you can display 5 videos at a time that constantly change.
Here's a website I found with that script: http://youthtoob.com/
- Radical_Yue
- Joined: Fri Feb 04, 2005 8:45 pm
- Status: The flamer with heart of gold~<3
Re: [beta.a-m-v.org] Hey, we're semi-official
EvaFan wrote:Im glad im not the only one who thinks polls are great for community development and feedback. Its a shame this site rarely uses them. Actually I think the only time I've seen them used was when we were deciding how animes would be listed in the catalog, naming wise.
Polls are awesome.
According to Vlad they're a pain to get working though :/ Even as a mod I don't have the power to create polls T_T I would have ALL THE POLLS if I could...
- xnamkcor
- Joined: Wed Jul 30, 2003 2:29 pm
- Location: Mesa, AZ
Re: [beta.a-m-v.org] Hey, we're semi-official
"I didn't ask for this"Pwolf wrote:Well, to be fair, he never asked for feedback, he only posted the link and told us what was working and what is being done in the future.Taite wrote:But If you put up a thread like this and ask for feedback, then you're going to get it, and that's where the mistake came in. The site is in such an early stage of development in my opinion, there's no way for any helpful feedback. People see the site as it is and they freak out because there's so much left undone that they start criticizing everything. Big mistake imo.
PS: He posted something for people to see on a Forum. Does he know what "forum" means?
WE DRAMATIZE IT COMPLETELY!
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- Joined: Tue Jan 24, 2012 12:35 am
Ugh.
If you conveniently ignore this thread, everything you said is absolutely correct.CodeZTM wrote: I'm feeling the same way with the opinion system and the current design philosophy, and I quite literally feel rather helpless about it.
Also.
Keep this in mind the next time you talk about "design". The former is not the latter, and the former is not even purely visual.
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- Joined: Tue Jan 24, 2012 12:35 am
Re: [beta.a-m-v.org] Hey, we're semi-official
Shit, I said I wouldn't come back to this thread. Fucking Internet.
- Minion
- Joined: Sat May 22, 2004 10:16 pm
- Location: orlando
- Contact:
Re: [beta.a-m-v.org] Hey, we're semi-official
semi-official gives me an official-semi
KioAtWork: I'm so bored. I don't have class again for another half hour.
Minion: masturbate into someones desk and giggle about it for the remaining 28 minutes
Minion: masturbate into someones desk and giggle about it for the remaining 28 minutes
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- Joined: Tue Jan 24, 2012 12:35 am
Re: [beta.a-m-v.org] Hey, we're semi-official
OK, I was going to stop, but now I am extremely pissed off.
I started this because I thought the .org could reposition itself as a hub for the AMV community once again. I thought that YouTube, Vimeo, Dailymotion, etc., while good at hosting videos, were very bad at ensuring permanence of those videos. The .org, with its hosting system and catalog, could help make that happen. Over time people would once again learn that there was one place on the Internet that really took AMVs and their artistic/historical significance seriously, and people would come back here. A community could be built, and planned, using that as a foundation.
I also have a number of user interaction ideas that I wanted to try. Some of them are original theories, but most of them are informed from Jef Raskin's The Humane Interface.
Since February, I have been researching technologies and designs to make this happen. I now think I've got something that can survive e.g. a legal firestorm; if we have people running other .org nodes in other countries, it will be possible for all of this AMV data to survive and remain accessible even in the event of total shutdown. That's not something that can be easily done right now: some people have backups of the .org database, but the .org codebase is not designed for that sort of replicated operation.
There's a lot left to do in that regard, and it may not work out quite as well as I want, but I think the foundation is solid.
On top of that foundation there has been quite a bit of discussion and work in implementing those UI ideas, and some of them really seem like they're going to do well in practice.
But now you accuse me of perpetuating a conspiracy to kill this effort?
Go fuck yourself. Your paranoid negativity is toxic and I am sick of it.
Fuck you.BasharOfTheAges wrote: I get this nagging feeling this is all just a set-up for us to collectively say "alright we give up, what we have now isn't really that bad."
I started this because I thought the .org could reposition itself as a hub for the AMV community once again. I thought that YouTube, Vimeo, Dailymotion, etc., while good at hosting videos, were very bad at ensuring permanence of those videos. The .org, with its hosting system and catalog, could help make that happen. Over time people would once again learn that there was one place on the Internet that really took AMVs and their artistic/historical significance seriously, and people would come back here. A community could be built, and planned, using that as a foundation.
I also have a number of user interaction ideas that I wanted to try. Some of them are original theories, but most of them are informed from Jef Raskin's The Humane Interface.
Since February, I have been researching technologies and designs to make this happen. I now think I've got something that can survive e.g. a legal firestorm; if we have people running other .org nodes in other countries, it will be possible for all of this AMV data to survive and remain accessible even in the event of total shutdown. That's not something that can be easily done right now: some people have backups of the .org database, but the .org codebase is not designed for that sort of replicated operation.
There's a lot left to do in that regard, and it may not work out quite as well as I want, but I think the foundation is solid.
On top of that foundation there has been quite a bit of discussion and work in implementing those UI ideas, and some of them really seem like they're going to do well in practice.
But now you accuse me of perpetuating a conspiracy to kill this effort?
Go fuck yourself. Your paranoid negativity is toxic and I am sick of it.
- xnamkcor
- Joined: Wed Jul 30, 2003 2:29 pm
- Location: Mesa, AZ
Re: [beta.a-m-v.org] Hey, we're semi-official
Just because you're paranoid, [doesn't] mean they're not after you.I Fight For The Users wrote:Go fuck yourself. Your paranoid negativity is toxic and I am sick of it.
WE DRAMATIZE IT COMPLETELY!
- BasharOfTheAges
- Just zis guy, you know?
- Joined: Tue Sep 14, 2004 11:32 pm
- Status: Breathing
- Location: Merrimack, NH
Re: [beta.a-m-v.org] Hey, we're semi-official
My mistake in language. The word "this" in my sentence quoted above was referring to "this thread" (particularly the hostility in it), not the beta site or the methodology behind it.I Fight For The Users wrote:OK, I was going to stop, but now I am extremely pissed off.
Fuck you.BasharOfTheAges wrote: I get this nagging feeling this is all just a set-up for us to collectively say "alright we give up, what we have now isn't really that bad."
I started this because I thought the .org could reposition itself as a hub for the AMV community once again. I thought that YouTube, Vimeo, Dailymotion, etc., while good at hosting videos, were very bad at ensuring permanence of those videos. The .org, with its hosting system and catalog, could help make that happen. Over time people would once again learn that there was one place on the Internet that really took AMVs and their artistic/historical significance seriously, and people would come back here. A community could be built, and planned, using that as a foundation.
I also have a number of user interaction ideas that I wanted to try. Some of them are original theories, but most of them are informed from Jef Raskin's The Humane Interface.
Since February, I have been researching technologies and designs to make this happen. I now think I've got something that can survive e.g. a legal firestorm; if whave people running other .org nodes in other countrit will be possible for all of this AMV data to survive and remain accessible even in the event of total shutdown. That's not something that can be easily done right now: some people have backups of the .org database, but the .org codebase is not designed for that sort of replicated operation.
There's a lot left to do in that regard, and it may not work out quite as well as I want, but I think the foundation is solid.
On top of that foundation there has been quite a bit of discussion and work in implementing those UI ideas, and some of them really seem like they're going to do well in practice.
But now you accuse me of perpetuating a conspiracy to kill this effort?
Go fuck yourself. Your paranoid negativity is toxic and I am sick of it.
Great example though.
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Anime Boston Fan Creations Staff (2016-2018)
Another Anime Convention AMV Contest Coordinator 2008-2016
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