> BTW where did you invent the text in the headline picture from?

 

It’s the title + wikidata description :)

 

Best,

Florian

 

Von: rupert THURNER [mailto:rupert.thurner@gmail.com]
Gesendet: Freitag, 13. März 2015 19:24
An: Dan Garry
Cc: florian.schmidt.welzow@t-online.de; mobile-l
Betreff: Re: [WikimediaMobile] [Apps] Stripping content inside brackets from the first sentence of articles

 

Hi dan,

I d like to switch to an expert view where I see the real contents of an article not just a mock up some machine generates from whatever source. If generating is your goal you might consider joining google.

I am pretty sure product management is able to design the options so that they are easy to set and do not become messy :)

BTW where did you invent the text in the headline picture from?

Rupert

On Mar 13, 2015 3:57 PM, "Dan Garry" <dgarry@wikimedia.org> wrote:

Hi Florian,

 

Thanks for the feedback!

 

Adding options for everything into the settings is a very slippery slope. If you want examples of where it can end up, take a look at your settings on Wikipedia! Tabs and tabs of options, many of which you don't even realise exist. Ultimate customisation seems like a good thing on the surface, but it creates tangled messes like that one. And it creates a nightmare for customer support, too; the user has to recount all the options they have turned on for you to reproduce their problems. VisualEditor is a good example of this, as it frequently breaks due to user CSS/JS that the user didn't even realise they had.

 

The other thing to consider about this is the development overhead. For every option we have, we're adding an extra combination of settings that we'd need to test and support. Those combinations grow exponentially with each option that's added; so if you've got four settings then that's 16 combinations... and adding a fifth option increases that to 32! So we must only add options for things that are truly the most important things, and supporting suboptimal layouts with an option doesn't seem worth that tradeoff to me.

 

Thanks,

Dan

 

On 12 March 2015 at 23:32, florian.schmidt.welzow@t-online.de <florian.schmidt.welzow@t-online.de> wrote:

Hi Dan!

 

 

I'm fine with solutions, that try to save space and put as much meaningful content as possible to the first view (available without scrolling) to the app. I'm wondering, if this new feature will be behind a feature flag in the settings of the app?

 

 

Like you said, stripping (or adding) content to or from a wikipedia article is very controversial, so i think the user should have the possibility to turn on (or off) the feature (i'm fine with default "on") to change the content in this way, or implement a setting to turn off _all_ changes to the content, so a user can see the plain wikipedia article without any changes?

 

 

Kind reagrds,

Florian

 

 

Freundliche Grüße
Florian Schmidt 

 

 

-----Original-Nachricht-----

Betreff: [WikimediaMobile] [Apps] Stripping content inside brackets from the first sentence of articles

Datum: Fri, 13 Mar 2015 02:07:34 +0100

Von: Dan Garry <dgarry@wikimedia.org>

An: mobile-l <mobile-l@lists.wikimedia.org>

 

 

 

Hi everyone,

 

tl;dr: We'll be stripping all content contained inside brackets from the first sentence of articles in the Wikipedia app.

 

The Mobile Apps Team is focussed on making the app a beautiful and engaging reader experience, and trying to support use cases like wanting to look something up quickly to find what it is. Unfortunately, there are several aspects of Wikipedia at present that are actively detrimental to that goal. One example of this are the lead sentences.

 

As mentioned in the other thread on this matter, lead sentences are poorly formatted and contain information that is detrimental to quickly looking up a topic. The team did a quick audit of the information available inside brackets in the first sentences, and typically it is pronunciation information which is probably better placed in the infobox rather than breaking up the first sentence. The other problem is that this information was typically inserted and previewed on a platform where space is not at a premium, and that calculation is different on mobile devices.

 

In order to better serve the quick lookup use case, the team has reached the decision to strip anything inside brackets in the first sentence of articles in the Wikipedia app.

 

Stripping content is not a decision to be made lightly. People took the time to write it, and that should be respected. We realise this is controversial. That said, it's the opinion of the team that the problem is pretty clear: this content is not optimised for users quickly looking things up on mobile devices at all, and will take a long time to solve through alternative means. A quicker solution is required.

 

The screenshots below are mockups of the before and after of the change. These are not final, I just put them together quickly to illustrate what I'm talking about.

If you have any questions, let me know.

 

Thanks,

Dan

 

--

Dan Garry

Associate Product Manager, Mobile Apps

Wikimedia Foundation

 

 


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--

Dan Garry

Associate Product Manager, Mobile Apps

Wikimedia Foundation


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