Tabbed Interface for Phaver Communities Section
under review
d
dedsec
Motivation:
When browsing a specific community page, only the most recent posts are displayed prominently. To find popular posts, we need to scroll through the recent posts, which is not ideal.
Idea:
Implement a tabbed interface to separate the content into two sections. One tab can display recommended or popular posts in the community, ranked by engagement or relevance for the day. The other tab can continue to show the most recent posts, similar to the current setup
Saska 🐨
need thisssss
Saska 🐨
under review
Saska 🐨
Hey dedsec, thanks for your feedback! I have a few more questions for you:
- Can you provide more details on how you would like the 'popular posts' to be ranked? For example, should it be based on the number of likes, comments, shares, or a combination of these factors?
- Would you like the 'popular posts' tab to display posts from a specific time period (e.g., daily, weekly, monthly), or should it include all-time popular posts?
- Do you have any suggestions on how the 'recommended posts' should be determined? Should it be based on your browsing history, interests, or some other factors?
d
dedsec
1 It could be a combination of likes, comments, and shares, giving more priority to comments. Additionally, by using a profile quality score like lens has, posts that have more interactions from high-quality profiles should be given higher priority in ranking.
2.We can have a sorting section similar to Reddit or other apps where users can sort posts by different time ranges, such as daily, weekly, monthly, or all-time.
3.The recommended section should heavily rely on the user’s browsing history, including communities visited and interacted with frequently, and posts upvoted or commented on. It should occasionally introduce posts from other communities that the user doesn't see often, like popular posts from communities they haven't joined.
Additionally, the recommended section should occasionally introduce new quality posts from users the person don't follow, ensuring they don't miss out on diverse and interesting content.