Categories page looks crowded compared to myBB

Related opinion that might be unpopular:

I personally feel overwhelmed by the landing page of Discourse forums being a jumble of topics from all categories. Old-school forums present a list of categories, I got to the ones I care about, and see what’s up. With Discourse, I see the top few topics, (maybe open the most interesting 2-3 in tabs), then go into “prevent information overload mode”, and close the landing page (topic list) tab.

I know a possible solution would be to set the landing page to /categories, but that looks crowded compared to, say, the classic MyBB landing page. My gut feeling says that, all other UX factors equal, a user might hang out more on a forum that welcomes them with the “classic” layout.

Can you post screenshots comparing the two, maybe mocking up what you think should change to make it better?

Grazie per aver spostato l’argomento, @codinghorror.

I mockup non sono il mio forte, ma ecco degli screenshot del Quantified Self Forum gestito da MyBB e da Discourse. I link puntano alle versioni live; fammi sapere se i reindirizzamenti non funzioneranno correttamente al momento in cui leggerai questo post.

Questo è uno dei tanti temi di MyBB.

Altri temi di MyBB potrebbero apparire ancora più puliti, ma tenendo presente il pubblico tipico dei forum MyBB (:cough:), «pulito» non rappresenta esattamente l’apice di ciò che IDEO definirebbe «design pulito».


http://community.mybb.com/uploads/mods/previews/preview_84715_1409690739_c40e48d3b62ad70737844a17c86c4fee.png

Credo che l’aspetto affollato dipenda dalla natura del forum. Più le categorie sono disparate, meno risulterà accattivante una visualizzazione «ultimi argomenti da qualsiasi categoria», e viceversa.

Thought experiment: how would the Discourse landing page scale to a high-traffic forum with a large number of categories?

Examples:

You could override the categories page template to make something similar to the MyBB landing page. For your forum there could be a table for each category, and the table rows could be formed by looping through the subcategories.

I’ve tried doing this. It’s difficult to get the latest topics that are associated with a subcategory in the category list.

You are comparing Latest to a list of categories. Apples to oranges. I know you know this, you even addressed it.

As for the benefits of a presentation à la myBB, I’d say even though it is cleaner, it is also way less informative. I also felt overwhelmed the first time I had seen Discourse, but now I wouldn’t go back to the legacy way of presenting topics. I agree some things could be hidden or toned down to make it clearer, but not to the detriment of information. Compare the density of relevant information for someone that is looking for interesting/relevant topics (highlighted in red):

If you argue that some people prefer to drill down inside categories to see the topics that are relevant to them, then they should bookmark that category instead of the whole forum.

I feel like I’m not making sense but I hope you understand.

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Wait, I can bookmark a category? How can I do that? I wasn’t able to find the option/button on the categories page or within a category. If you meant tracking, then that would generate a ton of notifications, no?

It would be really neat if users could bookmark a set of categories, and have (only) topics from those categories show up in latest (first). This would be a good solution to the thought experiment I presented above. If this is already possible, I must’be not seen it somehow and it might be worth reconsidering the ux for it.

Using your browser bookmark feature, I meant.