Thanks Andy! +1 to what Dmitry said.
Apart from what you brought up, in many articles maps show up as lead images. Maps that you can't interact with are a frustrating experience. This first leg of work on lead images improves 90% of the articles. Getting everything 100% right just isn't possible with the large amount of unstructured information and annotation we have around images.
Once we introduce focal point repositioning for images as a micro-contribution, these weak areas start to get ironed out.
Thanks Vibha
---- Vibha Bamba Senior Designer | WMF Design
On Fri, Dec 19, 2014 at 4:31 AM, Dmitry Brant dbrant@wikimedia.org wrote:
Hi Andy,
Thanks for uploading the screenshots! Image #1 looks like a bona fide bug that we'll need to investigate. However, the other images being suboptimally aligned simply exposes the fact that we're not always able to detect the "best" possible alignment for the image (our face detection algorithm cannot yet detect faces of wallabies, owls, or lorises!). For now, all we can do is default to centering the image in that viewing area. You may still tap on the image to view it in full-screen mode.
(We'll also investigate the other issues you mentioned.)
-Dmitry
On Thu, Dec 18, 2014 at 4:55 PM, Andy Mabbett andy@pigsonthewing.org.uk wrote:
On 17 December 2014 at 21:12, Dmitry Brant dbrant@wikimedia.org wrote:
- Lead Images -- When navigating to an article, the app now displays the
most relevant image from the article at the very top, with the image expanded to fit the width of your screen, and the title of the article overlaid onto it. This provides a much improved visual context of the article, and a better entry point into starting your reading experience. (We're even doing face-detection in the image, so that photos of
persons are
properly aligned in the viewing area)
I've found a number of bugs with this (all on HTC Desire HD, running Android 2.3.5, native browser), which can be seen in:
https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Category:Wikipedia_mobile_app_beta_bugs_-...
They include text over key parts of images (images numbered 3 and 4) and badly cropped images (2, 5, 6 ,7),
(Image 1 shows a different problem, with the featured article.)
- Image Viewer -- Tapping on any image in an article (including the lead
image) will take you to a full-screen image viewer where the image may
be
panned and zoomed.
I found this happened when I tapped on other parts of the page, even when the image was scrolled off-screen.
- Wikidata descriptions in Nearby search results.
When will we get the pins-on-map view back?
-- Andy Mabbett @pigsonthewing http://pigsonthewing.org.uk
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