prog: (Default)
prog ([personal profile] prog) wrote2007-07-25 07:02 pm
Entry tags:

More reasons to love XKCD

* The ambiguity of this comic:

Slashdorks will read it and be like "rofl i deal with idiots like this at work every damn day, but they'd fire me if I hung up on them for real", even though I'm fairly confident that's not the joke. Something for everyone!

* The comic is hand-lettered. I have probably already mentioned this as a reason I like the comic, but I'll say it again. Hand-lettering makes any comic look about ten times better to me. (And you could make a "zero times ten" wisecrack here, but I would retort that there is a basic charm to the art. Very basic, sure, but still.)

* There are no comments or ratings or anything attached to the comic. Everyone likes getting comments, and I'd understand if he wanted to have comments so that every comic would have an ever-growing beard of public "LOL ^^;" messages attached, but I wouldn't like it.

* The cartoonist invites and even encourages direct linking to the cartoon images, even printing the necessary HTML code beside each one. That's great.
spatch: (Default)

[personal profile] spatch 2007-07-26 03:08 am (UTC)(link)
There are no comments or ratings or anything attached to the comic. Everyone likes getting comments, and I'd understand if he wanted to have comments so that every comic would have an ever-growing beard of public "LOL ^^;" messages attached, but I wouldn't like it.

That's when you start listening to your own sycophants and that's how trouble starts. It was one of the reasons why I cut User Friendly out so many many many moons ago.

I am of the firm belief that even in this AMAZING BRAVE NEW WEB WORLD2.0, where "content is king" (but redundant servers and/or colos aren't) there are just some times when one's work doesn't need or require instantaneous feedback. The Boston Glob got such flack from the BLOGORAMASPHEROIDS about not having comments on their frequently-updated online columns. "You need comments!" they cried. "That's what this is all about!"

Yeah, and the Herald's section is a pure salon of independent and rational thought of comments. Of course the hell not. Newspapers have editors and letter screeners for a reason, and if there's one thing that should be taken from the Quite Predicted Imminent Death Of "Mainstream" Media (and what becomes Mainstream when the Mainstream is dead?) is that you need some kind of quality control with regards to feedback and flamewars waiting to happen.

In fact, short of maybe one or two long-term exceptions, I cannot think of a single site which has seen great benefit from either adding a comment structure or building upon it. The IMDB Message Boards are pure cesspools of idiocy, the YouTube comments are full of people who couldn't even hack it over at the IMDB boards, and yeah. What a wonderful community the world is.

[identity profile] prog.livejournal.com 2007-07-26 02:42 pm (UTC)(link)
Yeah, the only blogs that are improved by their comments are ones that are built a little like a newsgroup, with multiple (though often limited) top-level posters and a self-selecting community of smart, active commenters. The SF-lit/lefty-pol/first-aid(?!) blog Making Light is a prime example.

Two years ago I might've included Daily Kos but I've since abandoned that for the echo chamber that it is. And looking in my "News" bookmarks folder, I see Boing Boing and Language Log, both of which once had comments but now don't. You'd think that LL would fall under my rules, too. So it's clearly not an easy thing to pull of well.

[identity profile] chocorisu.livejournal.com 2007-07-26 03:16 pm (UTC)(link)
I wonder if xkcd's encouragement of direct links acts as a kind of selection mechanism for positive comments. Since it's fairly easy (especially for a smart chap like Mr Xkcd) to check what's linking to his comic, he can see at a glance what people are saying about it...

Also, he does have a blog (or "blag") that's one click back from the main page. It's a great mechanism for avoiding stupid comments while fostering a sense of community etc: it filters out the drive-by "FIRST COMMENT"s and so on, while giving the fans a place to chatter.

Or something.

Anyway, yes, I agree with you. Especially about YouTube, where anything remotely creative is FAKE!!

[identity profile] prog.livejournal.com 2007-07-26 03:24 pm (UTC)(link)
Argh. Minutes after writing my first reply to this I learned that (a) there's been a newsworthy accident in a friend's family and (b) the newspaper that covered it apparently allows comments on every single article it puts on-line. So first came the WHAT EVER HAPPPENED TO COMON SENSE??!! people and then came the people insisting that this showed why state taxes ought to be abolished. And then lots of comments calling them all idiots and offering sympathy, but really, nothing was gained by any of them being there.