Difference between revisions of "User talk:Lymaniii"

From PinataIsland.info, the Viva Piñata wiki
Jump to: navigation, search
(New page: {{subst:welcome}} == Thanks == The updates and additions that you made are appreciated! --~~~~)
 
Line 1: Line 1:
 
 
==Welcome, fellow piñata enthusiast!==
 
==Welcome, fellow piñata enthusiast!==
  
Line 19: Line 18:
  
 
The updates and additions that you made are appreciated!  --[[User:FeralKitty|FeralKitty]] ([[User_talk:FeralKitty|talk]]) 19:41, 18 February 2009 (UTC)
 
The updates and additions that you made are appreciated!  --[[User:FeralKitty|FeralKitty]] ([[User_talk:FeralKitty|talk]]) 19:41, 18 February 2009 (UTC)
 +
 +
 +
== Everything but the kitchen sink ==
 +
 +
It's a familiar concept that bites many of us at times, to creep more features into an application, to add more bells and whistles to some item, to cram more "content" into a wiki article.  Being an idealistic person myself, it's easy to imagine having 100% of the details within a wiki article.  Having done that, one could also lay that article out so it's viewable at, say, 800x600.
 +
 +
While it's possible to do something, I think the more important question, subjective as it is, is whether or not we should should do something.  As an example, let's use the arctic versions and variants, and how I had set out to [http://www.pinataisland.info/index.php?title=Mousezilla&oldid=22014 fit sub-garden species PV cards into the species article sandbox].  Certainly, it's species-specific, so the cards are in the right article, and let's say it looks great at any resolution.  Do we want to add those images to the article, and its Infobox?  Is there a need to cram more visual information in there, to make the Infobox longer, to make the article longer, to give the viewer more information to look at or scroll past?  Surely the majority of people come to the species article for the ''requirements,'' and the arctic version card is mostly incidental?  Images can be worth a thousand words, but in this case, we're not sparing the viewer from thousands of words.  I think seven more images bloated the article, and adding a sentence or two would be a better trade-off.
 +
 +
Giving people too much information can lead to other problems.  Maybe some viewers are avid or diligent readers, and will take in and appreciate every tidbit of information, but other viewers may overlook what they're searching for, because its buried somewhere in the paragraphs of text and screenful of images.  Now, technically, that's not the wiki's fault (since it's ''supposed'' to be a reference source of information about the game), and it should be the burden of the visitor to read articles, but experience has shown us that people don't "find" information (that's) at the wiki.
 +
 +
I don't think the solution is to cram more information in, every single place where someone someone might look for or expect it.  I think solutions have to do with improving navigation, organization, and presentation.  Yes, trick item cards could be added to a challenge article, but then they should be added to the species article too, right?  So, we add this in there, and so forth, and the whole thing spirals.  It gets harder to search the site, because you get hits all over the place, and it gets harder to maintain the site, because it's got thousands and thousands of images and repeated information in all sorts of different places, and the harder it is to maintain, the less accurate it can become, which interferes with its purpose as a reference.  I favor the "keep it simple" philosophy.  If it's not broken, it probably shouldn't be fixed, especially if the "fix" is more complex than what existed beforehand.
 +
 +
I guess that's why I get a little leery of adding features like "[[User:FeralKitty/Sandbox/Variants|click on this link to see]] a PV card for the item to learn a trick," because the mechanism might not be intuitive or obvious to everyone, because it's not consistent across the site (and visitors haven't had to do that before for other images), and because it didn't feel simple (or look ok, back then).  To me, the trade-off for trick item cards seems to be between "making the site make it easier for the gamer to earn achievements," versus "making the site easier to use, period."
 +
 +
We're adding cards to make it easier to accomplish 100% of the challenges.  Isn't that good enough?  I think that the wiki was meant as a reference.  Adding trick item cards too just feels like "everything but the kitchen sink," and I don't think we should take articles that far, to cram every possible image into them. --[[User:FeralKitty|FeralKitty]] ([[User_talk:FeralKitty|talk]]) 22:29, 1 May 2009 (UTC)

Revision as of 14:29, 1 May 2009

Welcome, fellow piñata enthusiast!

Hello, Lymaniii, and welcome to PinataIsland.info! Thank you for your contributions. I hope you like the place and decide to stay. Here are some pages that you might find helpful:

If you're already familiar with wiki editing, feel free to refer to our Site-specific Style guidelines for specific site style conventions.

To include information about your Xbox Live gamertag on your User page add the markup below:

{{Gamertag|XXXXXX}}

Substitute your Gamertag in place of XXXXXX.

I hope you enjoy editing here! Please sign your name on talk pages using four tildes (~~~~); this will automatically produce your name and the date. If you need help, ask me on my talk page. Again, welcome! FeralKitty (talk) 19:41, 18 February 2009 (UTC)

Thanks

The updates and additions that you made are appreciated! --FeralKitty (talk) 19:41, 18 February 2009 (UTC)


Everything but the kitchen sink

It's a familiar concept that bites many of us at times, to creep more features into an application, to add more bells and whistles to some item, to cram more "content" into a wiki article. Being an idealistic person myself, it's easy to imagine having 100% of the details within a wiki article. Having done that, one could also lay that article out so it's viewable at, say, 800x600.

While it's possible to do something, I think the more important question, subjective as it is, is whether or not we should should do something. As an example, let's use the arctic versions and variants, and how I had set out to fit sub-garden species PV cards into the species article sandbox. Certainly, it's species-specific, so the cards are in the right article, and let's say it looks great at any resolution. Do we want to add those images to the article, and its Infobox? Is there a need to cram more visual information in there, to make the Infobox longer, to make the article longer, to give the viewer more information to look at or scroll past? Surely the majority of people come to the species article for the requirements, and the arctic version card is mostly incidental? Images can be worth a thousand words, but in this case, we're not sparing the viewer from thousands of words. I think seven more images bloated the article, and adding a sentence or two would be a better trade-off.

Giving people too much information can lead to other problems. Maybe some viewers are avid or diligent readers, and will take in and appreciate every tidbit of information, but other viewers may overlook what they're searching for, because its buried somewhere in the paragraphs of text and screenful of images. Now, technically, that's not the wiki's fault (since it's supposed to be a reference source of information about the game), and it should be the burden of the visitor to read articles, but experience has shown us that people don't "find" information (that's) at the wiki.

I don't think the solution is to cram more information in, every single place where someone someone might look for or expect it. I think solutions have to do with improving navigation, organization, and presentation. Yes, trick item cards could be added to a challenge article, but then they should be added to the species article too, right? So, we add this in there, and so forth, and the whole thing spirals. It gets harder to search the site, because you get hits all over the place, and it gets harder to maintain the site, because it's got thousands and thousands of images and repeated information in all sorts of different places, and the harder it is to maintain, the less accurate it can become, which interferes with its purpose as a reference. I favor the "keep it simple" philosophy. If it's not broken, it probably shouldn't be fixed, especially if the "fix" is more complex than what existed beforehand.

I guess that's why I get a little leery of adding features like "click on this link to see a PV card for the item to learn a trick," because the mechanism might not be intuitive or obvious to everyone, because it's not consistent across the site (and visitors haven't had to do that before for other images), and because it didn't feel simple (or look ok, back then). To me, the trade-off for trick item cards seems to be between "making the site make it easier for the gamer to earn achievements," versus "making the site easier to use, period."

We're adding cards to make it easier to accomplish 100% of the challenges. Isn't that good enough? I think that the wiki was meant as a reference. Adding trick item cards too just feels like "everything but the kitchen sink," and I don't think we should take articles that far, to cram every possible image into them. --FeralKitty (talk) 22:29, 1 May 2009 (UTC)