on 2005/02/9 23:11, mediawiki-l-bounces@Wikimedia.org wrote:
On 9 Feb 2005, at 13:57, NSK wrote:
On Wednesday 09 February 2005 18:59, Jan Steinman wrote:
CONFUSED when they click on one word, and are still within the site,
You can just avoid linking to external sites. Why do you need external links?
Because they include useful information that people appreciate. Because I can't control what users (not the really unsophisticated ones, who don't edit) put on their pages. Because the wiki concept is free and open.
You could put a list of these links in a section at the end of the page. Properly label the section and provide some helpful blurb. This should make it clear that they're on an exit. Encourage other writers to follow the same conventions. The wiki concept is indeed free and open, but without some conventions and self-discipline it will quickly deteriorate into a mess that will soon be left alone. <play sounds of doom here>
Before you snort derisively about not knowing how to use a "back" button, think of someone you know that can barely use a VCR -- a parent or grandparent, perhaps. Shouldn't we try to make the Internet as easy as possible for them?
Yes, we should, but a Back button is pretty standard, and many sites and browser rely on it. Once your granny learns about the back button, she will be able to re-use it everywhere (and damn those sites that break the back button). If we all start inventing our own 'go back' implementations, your granny will become even more confused --- she will not be able to re-use what she has learned before, and she will become afraid of pushing anything at all.
People who get confused so easily need training.
This is true, but often not practical. Plus, they're 500km away from me.
Are you the only one that can tell those people how to use a browser?
Cheers, Peter.