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by andrewprock
974 days ago
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You're more than correct. In practice, working in small and medium organizations, I have met very few UX designers. Instead I have met plenty of graphical designers that know almost nothing about UX design. I've been at places where I - as a backend developer - know more about practical UX design than anyone on the design team. I think the reason why we have "bad mobile first design with awful desktop UX" is because very few of the people designing these experiences are UX designers. I was surprised the article didn't highlight the horror show that is Vector22 at Wikipedia, a design so colossally bad that after three years of suck costs the only path to saving face was to make it the default theme for all users: "Mission Accomplished!" https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Vector_2022 |
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The issue at hand is that overly long lines reduce reading speed and comprehension of the content[1]. The optimum length for a digital line of text is somewhere between 66 characters per line and 100 characters per line. I personally use the 100cpl rule. For reference, this HN page has ~185 characters per line on my 1920x1080 display at default scaling.
I do actually remember un-minimizing my browser in order to improve the rate at which I could read the text of ur-Wiki pages.
And then they provided an escape for old men shaking their fists at the sky. Given a choice, I would, without hesitation, choose the new design.
[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Line_length#:~:text=characters...