Make a Welcome section that’s clearly visible to first-time lurkers, and more helpful to them than the About page. PLEASE.
I think that the welcomethreads are an important boon to new users, but unfortunately they’re impossible to find as a lurker- the current fashion is to hope that someone notices that commenter X is new and says “Welcome to Less Wrong- check out the welcome thread!”
Unfortunately, there’s a lot on the welcome thread that I think would be really helpful for someone to check out before they get to that point; and worse, much of the time a person’s first comment is something that will get downvoted heavily for a reason they’d have known if they’d seen the welcome thread, and instead they end up in a flamewar and depart in a huff. THIS IS BAD.
I might expand on this idea with the general idea of, add a better “old-style website” portion to LW. Currently everything on LW is organized either blog-style or Reddit-style, which is not so great when you have things like important core pages you want everyone to be aware of—e.g. not only the sequences, but single-purpose threads (like the “best textbooks” thread) which, in the current blog-style format, might eventually be forgotten about and redone from scratch. Have a prominent “site map” style page that links to such things—the pages themselves can stay as blog posts, that’s not a problem. Perhaps Eliezer and the other editors can have the ability to mark a thread for inclusion on this automatically, so people don’t have to hand-code it in whenever there’s something that merits inclusion.
To some extent the wiki acts as this, actually, but it’s right now it’s very hidden, not what a new user will automatically encounter. What if the wiki were the main page?
I also propose that the content be voted on. I think a lot of us have something to say about how the site is presented to newcomers and I’d rather it not be left to a single person. Perhaps a competition like the one for rational philanthropy, or even proper A/B testing.
Make a Welcome section that’s clearly visible to first-time lurkers, and more helpful to them than the About page. PLEASE.
I think that the welcome threads are an important boon to new users, but unfortunately they’re impossible to find as a lurker- the current fashion is to hope that someone notices that commenter X is new and says “Welcome to Less Wrong- check out the welcome thread!”
Unfortunately, there’s a lot on the welcome thread that I think would be really helpful for someone to check out before they get to that point; and worse, much of the time a person’s first comment is something that will get downvoted heavily for a reason they’d have known if they’d seen the welcome thread, and instead they end up in a flamewar and depart in a huff. THIS IS BAD.
I might expand on this idea with the general idea of, add a better “old-style website” portion to LW. Currently everything on LW is organized either blog-style or Reddit-style, which is not so great when you have things like important core pages you want everyone to be aware of—e.g. not only the sequences, but single-purpose threads (like the “best textbooks” thread) which, in the current blog-style format, might eventually be forgotten about and redone from scratch. Have a prominent “site map” style page that links to such things—the pages themselves can stay as blog posts, that’s not a problem. Perhaps Eliezer and the other editors can have the ability to mark a thread for inclusion on this automatically, so people don’t have to hand-code it in whenever there’s something that merits inclusion.
To some extent the wiki acts as this, actually, but it’s right now it’s very hidden, not what a new user will automatically encounter. What if the wiki were the main page?
As an added incentive. I have committed to donating $50 to the hedonism fund (strictly enforced) of whoever’s design gets used as the Welcome Page.
I also propose that the content be voted on. I think a lot of us have something to say about how the site is presented to newcomers and I’d rather it not be left to a single person. Perhaps a competition like the one for rational philanthropy, or even proper A/B testing.
Excellent idea!