You're not dragging me into that whole 606 thing :-)
 
I was referring to threading as seen on www.slashdot.org (via
slashcode), where a converation has a (seemingly) unlimited heirarchy of
replies, rather than traditional messageboard threading based on user
topic (as seen on 606).
 
News' messageboards are from Jivesoft, 606 etc are done internally by
DNA. Different systems.
 
One little known requirement of the Have Your Say thing...
 
http://newsforums.bbc.co.uk/ws/thread.jspa?threadID=4895 (arabic)
http://newsforums.bbc.co.uk/ws/thread.jspa?threadID=4954 (urdu)
http://newsforums.bbc.co.uk/ws/thread.jspa?threadID=4958 (persian)
http://newsforums.bbc.co.uk/ws/thread.jspa?threadID=4959 (russian)
http://newsforums.bbc.co.uk/ws/thread.jspa?threadID=4960&start=0&tstart=
0&zh=simp (chinese simplified)
etc... http://www.bbc.co.uk/worldservice/languages/
 
J


________________________________

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of vijay chopra
Sent: 19 January 2007 11:48
To: backstage@lists.bbc.co.uk
Subject: Re: [backstage] crappy "have your say" forum




On 19/01/07, Jason Cartwright <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: 

        I'd imagine threaded conversations (which I think is what you
are
        suggesting) are difficult from a usability perspective, as well
as
        technically.
        
        Remember this system is probably the first time many users have
used a 
        messageboard, and this sucker needs to scale like crazy - given
the
        large numbers bbc.co.uk pushes (2.5bn pages/month on average
[1]),
        particularly when a big news story happens.
        


That's not the reason at all, the BBC used to have a decent message
board system (well an OK one) for it's 6-0-6 message boards, they've
replaced it with a blog-like structure against the wishes of most of
it's users. In his own blog, the sports editor, Chris Russell was forced
to admit it was "too popular" and was being changed more or less to make
it harder for people. 

A similar thing has happened to the today message boards, now only the
hacks are allowed to post topics, not the users, this was also the first
step in the destruction of the 6-0-6 message boards. The problem is one
of a lack of good hardware, not a software one. Basically the BBC needs
to beef up the servers that are hosting the message boards. 

Reply via email to