Admin wrote:as soon as academic work kicks in, I expect The Sinner will get even busier.
Hah, so true...
an old user wrote:No one gives a flying fuck about the W3C standards. They want a site that looks good and is easy to use.
I would agree with the sentiment that users want a site which looks good and is easy to use. But as a developer myself, W3C standards (although sometimes a pain) ease that process. If something isn't at least reasonably standards-compliant, different browsers will render it differently. Then you get complaints from users that something's broken - but it looks good in your browser. You manage to track the problem down and fix it, and it breaks in someone else's browser... and so on.
The situation isn't perfect; not all browsers behave themselves and you still have to provide "hacks" for some of them. But it's a damn sight easier to do that if you're working from a standardised, recognised base-level than if you don't bother with the standards in the first place!
Admin wrote:an old user wrote:I appreciate that the summer holiday is not representative, so what about last week then.
Last week is hardly representative either actually - most people are either travelling up or down the country, or out meeting new people or old friends. These coming weeks will be the measure of the site as it takes off. Once academic work starts and the procrastination bug kicks in, The Sinner will come into its own.
I would agree with this - especially amongst new students in St Andrews, most of whom live in halls in their first year. Most halls organise a huge number of events during their first week, plus there's the Union events and the University events like matriculation which are kind of hard to avoid.
Even though I'd already visited The Sinner once or twice before I arrived in Sept 2003, I didn't go on it at all for Fresher's week and the first week or two of term - there was just way too much going on.
Admin wrote:However, we're in the second week after a complete site overhaul - things haven't settled down yet, and most of the people involved in getting the new site up and running have either been involved with societies' stuff for Freshers' Week, or out of the country! I've hardly spent any time at all on the redesign, leaving it in Fawksie's and Orudge's hands; merely checking in on progress at the end of each night and making suggestions and requests.
As we've integrated software from three seperate major open-source projects, each with their own standards and ways of doing things, it is unsurprising that there are inconsistencies in terms of fonts, graphics and so on. But we're doing our best, and these things take time to sort out.
I came down with really nasty tonsillitus in the week before we launched, and I'm only just beginning to recover properly, so the majority of work has been left to Fawksie and Orudge - and there's only so much 2 people can do at once!
Sunil