Welcome!
Climb to the Stars is Stephanie Booth's personal site, going strong for 10 years now. You may suggest topics and vote on them for her to write about. Follow her on Twitter (@stephtara) and Tumblr (Digital Crumble).Learn more about Stephanie and find other nice things to read by checking out the big fat footer at the bottom of each page. Jump down there now!
Around
What I'm involved in these days...

Formation SAWI: Spécialiste en médias sociaux et communautés en ligne.
Rédactrice en chef et auteurActive Elsewhere
Whitney Houston dying feels very wrong to me, probably because she was so present musically during my teenage years.
Nous devons tout faire pour qu’Esma reste avec nous http://t.co/7jjwRsmE
Bookmarked a link: Nous devons tout faire pour qu’Esma reste avec nous http://t.co/7jjwRsmE
oh no. after the day-long powercut, the fireworks now it's around bed-time ;-) #pune
Bookmarked 2 links
Deserted Kerala Beach with Delhi Boys 69.jpg
Deserted Kerala Beach with Delhi Boys 70.jpg
Deserted Kerala Beach with Delhi Boys 71.jpg
Deserted Kerala Beach with Delhi Boys 72.jpg
Deserted Kerala Beach with Delhi Boys 73.jpg
Deserted Kerala Beach with Delhi Boys 74.jpg
Deserted Kerala Beach with Delhi Boys 75.jpg
Deserted Kerala Beach with Delhi Boys 76.jpg
Deserted Kerala Beach with Delhi Boys 77.jpg
Deserted Kerala Beach with Delhi Boys 78.jpg
Deserted Kerala Beach with Delhi Boys 79.jpg
Deserted Kerala Beach with Delhi Boys 80.jpg
Deserted Kerala Beach with Delhi Boys 81.jpg
Deserted Kerala Beach with Delhi Boys 82.jpg
Deserted Kerala Beach with Delhi Boys 83.jpg
Deserted Kerala Beach with Delhi Boys 84.jpg
Deserted Kerala Beach with Delhi Boys 85.jpg
Deserted Kerala Beach with Delhi Boys 86.jpg
Saturday 16:50
Does Airport Security Really Make Us Safer? http://t.co/XE66N5l9 > of course not
Our Deserted Beach in Kerala http://t.co/eq1YWasM
Bookmarked a link: 24 Hours » The Kickstarter Blog — Kickstarter
RT @sahilk: Mad 24 hours at @kickstarter. Insane stuff. http://t.co/2ECm9JuF
RT @sahilk: These election promotion loud speakers atop autos are so bad in quality, how do the candidates expect people to understand anything? #Pune
first proper bike driving lesson... maybe next year I'll drive around on the roads! #pune
Bookmarked a link: Instagram
Blogroll
- Adam Tinworth
- Andy Baio
- Anil Dash
- Brian Kellett
- Corinne Stoppelli
- danah boyd
- Dave Winer
- David Weinberger
- Derek Powazek
- Doc Searls
- Elisabeth Stoudmann
- Fortuitous (Matt Haughey)
- Heather Powazek Champ
- Jason Kottke
- Jeffrey Zeldman
- Jeremy Keith
- Joi Ito
- JP Rangaswami
- Karl Dubost
- Kevin Marks
- Laurent Gloaguen
- Laurent Haug
- Leisa Reichelt
- Matt Haughey
- Meg Hourihan
- Plantgasm (Derek Powazek)
- Stéphane Deschamps
- Suw Charman
- Tara Hunt
- Wil Wheaton
-
Headlines (Recent Posts)
- Losing Credit
- Mais qu’est-ce qui se passe?
- Remembering Bagha, 1996-19.12.2010
- Linkball for a Sunday Night
- Boundaries and Outsourcing Our Brains
- Renault at LeWeb: Lovely Lounge and the Twizy Test Drive
- LeWeb’11 Is Underway
- Habituation, Variety, and Intermittent Rewards
- Du désengouement pour les réseaux sociaux (et tout le reste)
- Links in New Windows: Websites vs. Applications
- Bagha: One Year, Coming Up
- Stuff to Read and Watch
- Measuring a Blog’s Success: Visitors and Comments Don’t Cut It
- Amit Gupta Needs You, and Other South Asians Too (Join the Marrow Registry!)
- Another Linkball
Archives
Categories
Lijit Search
Lijit SearchRecent Comments
- Stephanie Booth on Losing Credit
- Blog°Bar Fribourg & everywhere • blgmndybrn, bloggy, Blogs, friday • Der LeuMund.ch on Bloggy Friday vendredi 4 avril 19h30 à Lausanne
- Xavier on Losing Credit
- Stephanie Booth on Browser Language Detection and Redirection
- RACINE Yves on Frustrations comptables: banques et logiciels, c’est pas encore ça!
- Mads Mellergaard Baldersø on Browser Language Detection and Redirection
- Katharine on Solved the Dreaded MacBook Fan Problem
- Amanda C on Solved the Dreaded MacBook Fan Problem
- : : Alexis J : : blog » Le Net mis sous cloche. Effets du droit d’auteur sur les libertés fondamentales on Pirater n’est pas voler, en sept mythes
- alex on Manuel de survie Twitter pour francophones
Quote Me- "People always think getting dressed is about putting clothes on. It’s not. It’s a spell..."
- "I was outside, and the rain and the fog smelled nice. They smelled of hope, I think. They smelled..."
- "On apprend toujours mieux de ses propres erreurs que de celles des autres."
- "It’s like watching a train wreck and hanging around to see if there are going to be any..."
- "A certain amount of routine/ritual keeps one sane."




Against Threaded Conversations on Blogs
[fr]
J'avoue une préférence marquée pour les conversations linéaires plutôt que hierarchiques (en arbre). Les conversations linéaires génèrent peut-être moins de commentaires, mais elles ont un rapport signal/bruit plus favorable, n'encourageant pas le hors-sujet. Elles sont plus faciles à suivre et me semblent plus adaptées aux blogs.
[en]
So, now that Going Solo Lausanne is behind me and I can come back to a slightly more sane pace of life (and blogging here, hopefully), I’m starting to read blogs again, a little. Don’t hold your breath too long though, contrary to popular belief, I’ve never been much of a blog-reader.
Blog commenting
One topic I’ve read about a bit, and which is of particular interest for me, is blog commenting. Aside from the fascinating topic (I’m not kidding) of blog comment ownership, which I touched upon myself more than 18 months ago, there is the age-old debate: threaded vs. non-threaded comments.
On the backdrop of my break-up with coComment (impending, in the process, fresh) and their post about commenter’s rights, I’ve taken a closer look at Disqus. It looks promising, it does some stuff I like, but also stuff I really don’t like, like the dreaded threaded comments.
So, here’s an attempt to try to explain why I think that threaded comments in a blog context are not necessarily a good thing — although popular wisdom would have that they are “better” than normal, flat, conversations.
I did a little research to see if I could find anything solid to back up my claims (if anyone knows of proper research on these issues, let me know), but I didn’t find anything really solid. So, I’ll just have to try to make this logical enough that it can be convincing.
The appeal of threaded conversations
Threaded conversations are as old as the internet itself. Usenet, e-mail discussion list archives. So, they’re nothing new, and have been around a while.
When blogs started including comments — oh yes, there were blogs way before there were comments, and the commenting script I used on this blog was for many years a popular destination — so, when blog started including comments, those comments were not threaded (in the sense that they allowed hierarchy in the comments, or branching off, or a tree-like view).
For many years, all I saw on blogs was linear conversations, as opposed to threaded, tree-like conversations. Most forum software also functions like that.
Then, of course, with some regularity, I’ve heard people asking for plugins to make the conversations on their blogs “threaded”. And I wondered. Why the attraction to hierarchical conversations?
When we have a conversation, be it with a single other person, or around a big table, it flows in one direction: the direction of time. There is before, and there is after. One might say “you said something 10 minutes ago that I’d like to answer” — and we’re quite capable of following this kind of conversation. We do it every day.
If we chat, be it on IRC or on IM, or any other kind of chatroom, we know that there are often multiple intertwined conversations going on at the same time. With a bit of practice, it doesn’t bother us too much. But the important point remains: the conversation is ordered chronologically.
So, be it offline or online, most of the conversations we have are time-ordered.
I think the appeal of threaded hierarchical conversations lies in the fact that they seem more “orderly” than one long stream of posts, ordered not necessarily by the logic of the conversation topic, but by the flow of time in which it takes place. It’s hierarchical. It’s organized. It’s neat, mathematical, logical. Algorithmic. Computer-friendly.
But is it brain-friendly?
Human-friendly conversations
Human beings do not think like computers. Though some human beings who spend lots of time programming or give excessive importance to logico-mathematical thinking might like approaching problems and the rest of life in a binary way, that is simply not how most people function. (Literary backdrop for this paragraph: A Perfect Mess.)
I think people who like threaded conversations like them because they have a higher order of organisation than non-threaded conversations. And better organised should be… better.
You won’t be surprised that I disagree with this. A good conversation online, for me, is one that can be easily followed, caught up with, and participated in. In that respect, a linear suite of comments is much easier to read or catch up with than a huge tree. When it comes to participating, the linear conversation offers only one option: add a comment at the end. In the tree, you first have to decide where in the tree you’re going to post. (Literary backdrop for this paragraph: The Paradox of Choice.)
How the format impacts the conversation
Another way to tackle this is to examine what impact hierarchical and linear comment threads have on the conversations they host.
Hierarchical – Threaded:
Linear:
I personally do not think that “more comments = better”. On a blog post, I like to see the conversation stay reasonably focused on the initial topic. For that reason, I think that linear comments are best on a blog.
More conversation is not always better
Of course, there are always parallel conversations going on. On Twitter, on FriendFeed, in IM windows I’ll never know about. As a blogger, I would like a way to point to these conversations from my post, so that a person reading could then have access easily to all the public conversations going on about what they read. Conversation fragmentation is not something we’re going to get rid of, but we can try to minimize it.
Increasingly, our problem is becoming one of signal-to-noise ratio and chatter. These are subjective notions. My signal is somebody else’s noise, and vice versa. I’m happy that there is chatter and small talk in the world and online (it’s a big part of human interaction and what relationships can be made of), also about what I write. But on my blog, I’d like to keep the chatter somewhat down, even if that means my “number of comments per post” or “conversational index” is not high. I’d rather have less conversation here, and give it a chance to be more interesting and accessible to outsiders, than huge 50+ comment threads that nobody is going to read besides the hardcore die-hard social media types.
More reading and listening
You’ll find some of the links I found on del.icio.us. If you’re into videos, the topic was raised about 6 months ago on Seesmic. Here’s what I had to say at the time:
I’ve also dug up a few quotes I found in some old discussions on MeFi. They’re in my Tumblr, but as Tumblr tumbles along, I’m reproducing them here:
Micheal Boyle (mikel)
Matt Haughey
five fresh fish
Similar Posts: