Something that that would be useful is a video demonstration of Flow in action.
I like the goal of VE in principle, and I hear lots of comments to the effect that it is improving over time. MediaViewer seems to be on the road to improvement. I understand where both of those are headed. But I am trying to get a mental picture of Flow from what I've read. A video would be worth a thousand words. If Flow helps us to organize discussions in ways that makes them easier for everyone to follow, that will be good. If Flow disrupts constructive ways of having conversations and is not intuitive, there will be yet another round of power users asking why time and money are being spent on projects that miss the biggest pain points and may cause more pain. I am hoping that Flow will be an improvement, and I think a video demo or mockup of Flow would be helpful to evaluate if Flow's design is likely to produce the intended results.
Pine
On Fri, Sep 5, 2014 at 11:29 PM, Erik Moeller erik@wikimedia.org wrote:
On Fri, Sep 5, 2014 at 11:13 PM, Erik Moeller erik@wikimedia.org wrote:
That's a legitimate question, although it's not as "radically divorced" as you would think; ultimately it'll use the VisualEditor (probably with a simplified toolbar by default) just like Flow does.
.. just like article editing, I mean - you'll have a choice between VE/wikitext, probably with a toolbar that's optimized for comments (perhaps advanced tools available when needed).
Moreover, I think the idea that talk pages are actually an intuitive system once you're familiar with editing articles is both unproven and contradicted by all user research into article editing and talk pages. Users discover wikitext incrementally, and they understand it to be "kind of like HTML". They think of it as a document formatting language.
When they first discover talk pages, they have to learn a whole new set of conventions -- the notion of signing and indenting your own comments, the idea that in order to participate in a thread you have to edit it, etc. That is a system divorced from editing, and it's a mental model unlike any other discussion system.
The argument would be more supportable if you could layer a decent UI on top of wikitext-based talk pages, as you suggest. But if you can do that, you'll end up with a UI that introduces many of the same conventions that Flow introduces, just with a hard limitation on some of the additional capabilities and conveniences you can introduce. It may be, as I acknowledged, still worth doing - even as an interim step towards Flow.
Erik
Erik Möller VP of Engineering and Product Development, Wikimedia Foundation
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