First of all, Wordie is an awesome idea and service! Thanks for making it! Here are a few suggestions I posted on my website and will now post here:
1) Hire a graphic designer. This is probably what most would suggest right off the bat. I’m usually a fan of low-fi design, but Wordie leaves my eyes tired and bored. They don’t have to go all hardcore 2.0 with gradients, reflections, soft shadows, starbursts, and the sort, but a little splash of colour and some nicer menu interfaces would do a lot of good. It would also add a little flare if users had their own avatar, a feature common in most forums and 2.0 services. This could actually be implemented really easily through Gravatar (Globally Recognized Avatar).
2)Build a stronger sense of community. The easiest way for Wordie to do this would be by creating contacts, groups, pools, and other features which would allow users to meet, interact, and socialise with other users.
3)Allow for accented unicode characters, please. This is probably pretty controversial as it could potentially create multiple entries for the same word if different users choose to spell it different ways.
But if you think about it, there are some words that just need a diacritic. For example many English words of French origin, such as: résumé vs. resume; divorcé vs. divorce; exposé vs. expose; chargé vs. charge; and worst of all pâté, pâte, and pate. And in reality, these will be such a minute percentage that it probably won’t create a problem. These diacritics aren’t there for no reason; for Pete’s sake, it’s a site about words, let’s do it right.
4) Allow users to specify which dictionary services are listed to look up words. Right now Wordie displays next to words 8 sources: Ninjawords, The Free Dictionary, Etymonline, Dictionary.com, Merriam-Webster Online, Urban Dictionary, Wikipedia, and Google. Quite frankly, several of them are pretty much your standard dictionary and only offer redundancy. Continue listing these as default, but allow users to choose to specify themselves which references are listed if they so desire.
5) Include functionability for non-latin foreign languages. I applaud the creators for using UTF-8 encoding, but right now the Wordie guidelines state that ‘the word must exist in at least one language. If that language is not based on the standard Latin alphabet, transliteration must be done intelligently’. Why must we transliterate? I tested it out and I can add Russian words to my lists just fine using Cyrillic characters. Wordie could be of great use to language learners who want to keep lists of new words they learn.
6) Make a word stream badge on your own site. It would be great if someone would create a tutorial for making a ‘badge’ that would display your most recent Wordie words on your blog or personal website, similar to a Flickr badge. This can done already since you can subscribe to RSS feeds of word lists, but I’m sure the average user hasn’t got a clue how to do it.
I’m sure that these and many other issues will be addressed in the near future.
digenis's Comments
Comments by digenis
digenis commented on the list word-guidelines-for-wordie
Oh, and one more easier thing. In lists of comments it would be helpful to display the date and time that the comment was posted.
December 14, 2006
digenis commented on the list word-guidelines-for-wordie
First of all, Wordie is an awesome idea and service! Thanks for making it! Here are a few suggestions I posted on my website and will now post here:
1) Hire a graphic designer. This is probably what most would suggest right off the bat. I’m usually a fan of low-fi design, but Wordie leaves my eyes tired and bored. They don’t have to go all hardcore 2.0 with gradients, reflections, soft shadows, starbursts, and the sort, but a little splash of colour and some nicer menu interfaces would do a lot of good. It would also add a little flare if users had their own avatar, a feature common in most forums and 2.0 services. This could actually be implemented really easily through Gravatar (Globally Recognized Avatar).
2)Build a stronger sense of community. The easiest way for Wordie to do this would be by creating contacts, groups, pools, and other features which would allow users to meet, interact, and socialise with other users.
3)Allow for accented unicode characters, please. This is probably pretty controversial as it could potentially create multiple entries for the same word if different users choose to spell it different ways.
But if you think about it, there are some words that just need a diacritic. For example many English words of French origin, such as: résumé vs. resume; divorcé vs. divorce; exposé vs. expose; chargé vs. charge; and worst of all pâté, pâte, and pate. And in reality, these will be such a minute percentage that it probably won’t create a problem. These diacritics aren’t there for no reason; for Pete’s sake, it’s a site about words, let’s do it right.
4) Allow users to specify which dictionary services are listed to look up words. Right now Wordie displays next to words 8 sources: Ninjawords, The Free Dictionary, Etymonline, Dictionary.com, Merriam-Webster Online, Urban Dictionary, Wikipedia, and Google. Quite frankly, several of them are pretty much your standard dictionary and only offer redundancy. Continue listing these as default, but allow users to choose to specify themselves which references are listed if they so desire.
5) Include functionability for non-latin foreign languages. I applaud the creators for using UTF-8 encoding, but right now the Wordie guidelines state that ‘the word must exist in at least one language. If that language is not based on the standard Latin alphabet, transliteration must be done intelligently’. Why must we transliterate? I tested it out and I can add Russian words to my lists just fine using Cyrillic characters. Wordie could be of great use to language learners who want to keep lists of new words they learn.
6) Make a word stream badge on your own site. It would be great if someone would create a tutorial for making a ‘badge’ that would display your most recent Wordie words on your blog or personal website, similar to a Flickr badge. This can done already since you can subscribe to RSS feeds of word lists, but I’m sure the average user hasn’t got a clue how to do it.
I’m sure that these and many other issues will be addressed in the near future.
December 14, 2006