First of all, I have five Vox invites if anyone's looking for one.
I expect I'm late to the game, and everyone who wants one probably has one by now. I had applied for one directly, then
dougs gave me one (thanks), and today I got an email with the invite I'd originally applied for (so that probably makes six).
The site has some nice features, but all the Web 2.0 interactivity and funkiness isn't quite as smooth as I would have hoped. There's quite a places where more clicks than seem necessary are required. On the main profile editing page, you can see some details like country and gender, but you have to go to another page to actually edit them.
The thing that really bugs me, though, is the fixed width layout. The page is a certain number of pixels wide, and that's it. If your browser window is wider than that, you get grey bars down the sides (like a widescreen telly in 4:3 mode). If it's too narrow, too bad, you have to keep scrolling left and right to read it. Ugh.
I haven't got as far as customising the layout, but it seems a lot less flexible than LJ. LJ let's you take almost total control of the look of your journal. I built my own S2 style, and there's very little you can't do (except for putting dodgy things like Javascript on the page). For that matter, if you wanted to, you could make a fixed width S2 style and annoy your users the way Vox do.
The other thing I find a bit annoying is the "Neighborhood" (they really should have thought about that one - there must be lots of words that mean the same thing but have a spelling that doesn't annoy every English speaker outside the US). But apart from the word itself, I find it really difficult to find people I know who have Vox accounts. In LJ, it was real easy when I started to just look at my friends' friends lists and pick out people I knew. But when I look at peoples' profiles in Vox, it only seems to show a couple of their friends, so it's difficult to find people. I can type in email addresses, but most people I know have several, so how do I know which one they used?
A really neat feature would be to have a field where I could type in my LJ name (replicate for other popular community sites), and it would store it in my profile. I could then go to a page where it would look up my LJ profile, and find anyone from my FL who has registered an LJ name in Vox. That wouldn't be too hard, would it?
Anyway, I don't want to only focus on the bad points. There are some nice things about it, and most of the problems are fixable. There are quite a few things I'd love to see LJ copy too. We don't need LJ to go totally Web 2.0 (a stupid term - it's just a website with some flashy bits), but a few little bits here and there could work wonders. My first suggestion is to add a Google-style auto-suggeston drop-down to the tags box when posting.
I expect I'm late to the game, and everyone who wants one probably has one by now. I had applied for one directly, then
![[livejournal.com profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/external/lj-userinfo.gif)
The site has some nice features, but all the Web 2.0 interactivity and funkiness isn't quite as smooth as I would have hoped. There's quite a places where more clicks than seem necessary are required. On the main profile editing page, you can see some details like country and gender, but you have to go to another page to actually edit them.
The thing that really bugs me, though, is the fixed width layout. The page is a certain number of pixels wide, and that's it. If your browser window is wider than that, you get grey bars down the sides (like a widescreen telly in 4:3 mode). If it's too narrow, too bad, you have to keep scrolling left and right to read it. Ugh.
I haven't got as far as customising the layout, but it seems a lot less flexible than LJ. LJ let's you take almost total control of the look of your journal. I built my own S2 style, and there's very little you can't do (except for putting dodgy things like Javascript on the page). For that matter, if you wanted to, you could make a fixed width S2 style and annoy your users the way Vox do.
The other thing I find a bit annoying is the "Neighborhood" (they really should have thought about that one - there must be lots of words that mean the same thing but have a spelling that doesn't annoy every English speaker outside the US). But apart from the word itself, I find it really difficult to find people I know who have Vox accounts. In LJ, it was real easy when I started to just look at my friends' friends lists and pick out people I knew. But when I look at peoples' profiles in Vox, it only seems to show a couple of their friends, so it's difficult to find people. I can type in email addresses, but most people I know have several, so how do I know which one they used?
A really neat feature would be to have a field where I could type in my LJ name (replicate for other popular community sites), and it would store it in my profile. I could then go to a page where it would look up my LJ profile, and find anyone from my FL who has registered an LJ name in Vox. That wouldn't be too hard, would it?
Anyway, I don't want to only focus on the bad points. There are some nice things about it, and most of the problems are fixable. There are quite a few things I'd love to see LJ copy too. We don't need LJ to go totally Web 2.0 (a stupid term - it's just a website with some flashy bits), but a few little bits here and there could work wonders. My first suggestion is to add a Google-style auto-suggeston drop-down to the tags box when posting.