New Theme for WUWT

Don’t worry readers, I’m trying an experiment. WUWT has looked the same for about 3 years, so I’m giving it a makeover. I’ve activated a newly designed theme for WUWT. This one has advantages over the old one in that it does a better job of supporting newer hi-res monitors such as the 20-24″ LCD/HDTV models that are becoming popular.

It also provides for larger text and images, better visibility of links, plus a few other features including a custom background which I’ll get to later.

In the meantime, let me know what you think in the poll below.

Sadly, no I still can’t offer an edit feature. wordpress.com hosting doesn’t support it.

UPDATE: Some readers say they can’t see links on the right side. They are there, try the horizontal scrollbar or set your monitor to a higher resolution. Also, wordpress during the upgrade nuked all my widgets on the right hand side, working to restore them -A

UPDATE: all the sidebar widgets are now restored. -A

UPDATE from CTM: Firefox users should  install the CA assistant and greasemonkey.

http://climateaudit.org/ca-assistant/

This gives you full previews and some preview and formatting buttons.

Make sure to set your installation settings to not hide old comments or much will disappear.

Comment Tab:

  • “Old” and “New” comments are defined by age in hours.
  • You can hide all old comments (default: 48 hours). Hiding older comments is a great way to simplify your view of more intense discussions. (On Lucia and RomanM’s sites, the content of old contents disappears, but Author/Date remain. Nice!)
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April 27, 2010 9:00 am

Much better, larger text a definite bonus.

Larey
April 27, 2010 9:02 am

Nothing basically wrong with the new theme but I would prefer a format that is a little more dense, more words packed into a smaller space? I found the old format font size and column width to be a little more readable. I mainly read on laptops so perhaps I just need some new monitors.

Leon Brozyna
April 27, 2010 9:02 am

Cleaner, crisper … way cool. So far, so good.

Neil Jones
April 27, 2010 9:02 am

I’m missing the links down the side
REPLY: They are there, try the horizontal scrollbar or set your monitor to a higher resolution -A

vigilantfish
April 27, 2010 9:03 am

Hope the links on the right side of the page get put back. I think the new format is easier on the eyes. Nice!
REPLY: They are there, try the horizontal scrollbar or set your monitor to a higher resolution -A

Timothy Smith
April 27, 2010 9:04 am

I really do like the new look. Very crisp and clean.

April 27, 2010 9:04 am

Geez … and I had just submitted a post and got this strange-looking WUWT screen coming back at me – persistent after several refreshes even!!
.
.

LeoR
April 27, 2010 9:06 am

I miss the quick links to recent stories, and the other related links that were usually located on the right hand side of the page.

Phineas Fahrquar
April 27, 2010 9:06 am

It’s less crowded, which is good.

vigilantfish
April 27, 2010 9:07 am

Hi Anthony,
There is no horizontal scroll bar, which I assume should appear at the bottom of the page. I like the inclusion of HTML information below the text box; this will tempt tech illiterates like me to try to improve our formatting.
REPLY: Running a Mac or an ancient PC or some off-brand browser or all the above? -A

Bernie
April 27, 2010 9:07 am

A:
I see no links on the LHS except to the Archive. New look is OK.
B

David Snyder
April 27, 2010 9:07 am

Like the layout but miss the “home” blog summaries.

Dr.P
April 27, 2010 9:08 am

Like the look.
Will the usual quick links at the right hand side be available again, as they made checking things really quick.
Mark

LeoR
April 27, 2010 9:08 am

They are there, try the horizontal scrollbar or set your monitor to a higher resolution -A
I still don’t see the links to the right side of the page, There is no horzontal scrollbar, just the vertical one, is it just me?

LeoR
April 27, 2010 9:12 am

I am running Windows 7, using Google Chrome. My Win 7 settings are : DPI set to default “medium”, desktop resolution at 1920 x 1080. I don’t use the zoom feature of Google Chrome.

Erik
April 27, 2010 9:13 am

“supporting newer hi-res monitors such as the 20-24″ models”
Big Al will be very pleased I’m sure, the picture on his blog show him in front of 3 very big carbon footprinting monitors [rollseyes] – well, don’t do as I do, do as…

wws
April 27, 2010 9:14 am

I am running a new PC, and I see no horizontal scrollbar and no links to the side either. And this is a desktop system with a good sized rectangular screen – very mainstream viewing platform.

Matthew Edin
April 27, 2010 9:15 am

Looks too much like realclimate across the top!

vigilantfish
April 27, 2010 9:15 am

Hi Anthony,
I do use a two month-old Macbook Pro to look at your website. But I see that you’ve identified a problem. Thanks!

Paul Linsay
April 27, 2010 9:15 am

Don’t see a thing along the right side except the archive list. No scroll bars, bubkis. I’m using Safari on an iMac with OS X 10.5.8.

wws
April 27, 2010 9:16 am

additional – this is an IBM compatible platorm, not a mac, using Explorer.
I do see a link to archives on the side, but nothing else. No links to any of the sites, that was such a useful feature of the old format.

John from CA
April 27, 2010 9:17 am

Very Clean and the larger text is great but a bit to large. A majority of monitors are now landscape which could give you more space to play with.

Urederra
April 27, 2010 9:19 am

where is the Arctic ice extension graph?
And the spotless sun?
🙁

TJA
April 27, 2010 9:21 am

Ironically RealClimate’s logo has an image of the Sun, which they deny is an actor in the climate, and yours does not. I like the look overall, but I am running Vista on a spanking new laptop with 16X9 screen.

simon
April 27, 2010 9:22 am

it would be better with a lot less space between the main article heading and the article

Charles
April 27, 2010 9:23 am

Anthony,
I’m running the latest Firefox or the latest IE on Windows XP and I don’t see the links on the right hand side and I have no horizontal scroll. Thr rhs only has the archives, search box, and a login/register option.

Eddie
April 27, 2010 9:23 am

Looks great. Maybe now I won’t have to CTRL+Scroll to enlarge the window to read the text on my 47″ HTPC.

View from the Solent
April 27, 2010 9:25 am

I see no widgets on the RHS. Search archive, meta are there. Are you still in the process of adding the former?
I like the clean appearance, but there’s a heck of a lot of wasted real estate to the right of the comments.

tommy
April 27, 2010 9:25 am

The right side links are gone for me as well even though i use firefox 3.6.

Ray Beckett
April 27, 2010 9:27 am

No links down the side for me either (just the monthly archive list). IE8 fully patched. Just tried it on Firefox 3.6.3, same problem. No horizontal scroll bar. (my display is 1600×1200)
While the larger text is ok, the main page images seem to have shrunk a little.

cbone
April 27, 2010 9:28 am

The only links I see are the archive links. The blogroll and other info graphs are gone, and there is no horizontal scroll bar. I’m running Firefox on Windows Vista

tim c
April 27, 2010 9:28 am

I’m on win XP using firefox and no horizontal bar and no right side just archives.
Thanks Anthony.

PaulH
April 27, 2010 9:28 am

I like the larger text. Now I don’t have to use NoSquint on this site. 😉 I saw one of those 24″ monitors at Costco. The price was good, but I’m on a budget these days so I’ll have to wait.

Ursus
April 27, 2010 9:29 am

Too bright! All light/white themes are difficult to read, especially at night or in dark rooms.
Maybe tone down the background/border a bit.

ronan o'malley
April 27, 2010 9:30 am

Am running a new Mac book Pro and there is no horizontal scroll bar.Is this a remediable problem on a Mac?

Frank
April 27, 2010 9:30 am

I like the cleaner look; the right side was very cluttered before. My main criticism is the header photo; it’s not very sharp. Is that the same image as before? I can’t remember. Also, I suggest branding your name. Find a way to display it that makes it stand out.

JDN
April 27, 2010 9:31 am

I’m missing all the side links. Also, the font choice only seems like a good idea until you have to look at it for a year. I like the old site better & I’m using 1280×1024 widescreen format.

April 27, 2010 9:31 am

* Could do with a separator highlighting the start of an entry (or having the background of the Entry title a full width color – gray, perhaps).
* the blog caption and tag line could do with moving into the image – the blog, tagline and header image take up about 40% of the vertical space on a 1280×1024 monitor. Hate to think what it’s like on a newer widescreen laptop screen with only 800 pixels of vertical resolution.
* larger text is great. Although most browsers have the ability to resize the text for the reader quite readily. It looks good on a 1680×1050 monitor – with a lower res monitor I do have to shrink the text down a notch to make it a bit more presentable (caption spacing verses text size) but does make a few other things too small, then.
* If most people are running higher res/larger screens, I believe on the whole it’s a bit more readable. Older screens/lower res may not like it as much as the old screen.
I’ll probably read this on the widescreened computer rather than my dev machine, now, based on these changes.

Alan S. Blue
April 27, 2010 9:33 am

Are the other sidebar things (beyond the Search, Archives, Meta) just missing for now? Like the picture of the (again) sunspot-adverse sun?

R.S.Brown
April 27, 2010 9:34 am

Anthony:
The only stuff I see on the right side of WUWT is the search box, the Archives list, and the two
item “Meta” list. Since I’ve used the “old” list of postings three times in two years, I can’t
say I miss it not being there.
You now take up 3/4ths of my screen, rather than the old 2/3rds.
Running IE 6, with http://wattsupwiththat.com/ listed as “permitted” and passing through the
“privacy” filter. I have all the current MS and Norton/Symantec updates installed.
My “NO! Flash” SW flash blocker is turned off.
No scroll bar can be seen.
The text is very readable, especially on my flat screen, which is sometimes a challenge given
my bifocals.
Good look overall.

Kevin
April 27, 2010 9:34 am

I read the blog through RSS in Thunderbird 2.0.0.24. The posts display offset horizontally from the header so that the left edge of the text is aligned with the right edge of the header. I have to scroll to the right in order to see the post at all.

Johnathan Birks
April 27, 2010 9:35 am

Don’t see anything wrong with it. Don’t see any real improvement either. Cleaner, yes, but kinda generic too. C-plus.

OkieSkeptic
April 27, 2010 9:36 am

At a screen resolution of 1024 x 768 on a 20 inch monitor, I have a too-wide screen with no data below the pix on the left and have to scroll to the right side to pick up data there. Based on this, I would have to say that I hate it.

Mr. Alex
April 27, 2010 9:37 am

Sorry, I preferred the old theme. It was more compact, and appealing. It feels bigger and more spaced out (I have fixed this by using Ctrl -). The only links I see are archives.
Picture at the top looks pixelated.. reminds me of a 90’s webpage. Good to see the smiley is still there at the bottom! Content still 100% though 🙂

P Walker
April 27, 2010 9:38 am

Anthony ,
I’m having the same problem as vigilantfish . The links to your archives are there , but nothing else .
REPLY: The problem was describing “links” in galactically broad terms. Which he meant to be specific, inlcuding images, widgets, ads, etc but I took as “everything”. All there now, and a lesson to be specific when describing problems. -A

Mr. Alex
April 27, 2010 9:39 am

Sorry, I preferred the old theme. It was more compact, and appealing. It feels bigger and more spaced out (I have fixed this by using Ctrl -).
Picture at the top looks pixelated.. reminds me of a 90’s webpage. Good to see the smiley is still there at the bottom! Content still 100% though 🙂

April 27, 2010 9:40 am

except for ‘Archives’ no right side links. Have very high screen resolution on very large screen.

OkieSkeptic
April 27, 2010 9:41 am

Follow up: It looks like the right side needs to be slide to the left just under the earth pix. I also see a right side archive list on Firefox 2.0.0.20 (too many probs with the latest version) with XP but no links.

Alan Bates
April 27, 2010 9:42 am

It’s OK. Personally (and I may be old fashioned and in a minority of 1) it’s the content that gets me to come back regularly – provided I can read it, almost anything would be OK!
2 year old PC, Vista, IE8, 19 inch screen, 1440×900, colours = highest (32 bit).

Tom in Florida
April 27, 2010 9:42 am

I think the statement “Commentary on puzzling things in life, nature, science, weather, climate change, technology, and recent news by Anthony Watts” is important and needs to be larger, a distinctive color and directly under the “Watts Up With That?”

April 27, 2010 9:43 am

Dear Sir,
Your present font seems to be two times bigger then the one used before. I had to used 80% scaling ratio on my Opera web browser to read equally fast as before.
Sometimes one look at the text decides if I should read it or not. Now I have to grab all the words from my screen to one place (to understands them). 😉
Best regards,
Przemysław Pawełczyk

David, UK
April 27, 2010 9:43 am

I went with the “it’s ok” option as I can’t get too emotional over a website design, good or bad – but, if anything, I do prefer the new look. The main thing I love about this site though, is the content, so as long as this remains consistently gripping, I will take the format as it comes!

Dr T G Watkins
April 27, 2010 9:43 am

No links on Safari new MacBook Pro.
Old layout so familiar and reassuring.

David Madsen
April 27, 2010 9:44 am

I noticed that there is no link back to the home page. While I noticed that one can click on the “Watt’s Up With That?” title to go back to the home page, having a link titled “Home” in your link bar at the top would be nice.
Ultimately, a great upgrade to a good website. Thanks for all the work and research you do.

Tom in Florida
April 27, 2010 9:44 am

Also, how about a better font for the title?

April 27, 2010 9:44 am

Ubuntu 9.10 Linux with Chrome – Ok

Dr T G Watkins
April 27, 2010 9:46 am

That’s better, but still prefer original. That will not reduce my visits,however.

April 27, 2010 9:47 am

I like the new look. White space and larger fonts are a plus. I view on 24″ widescreen at work and home, and the new look is very readable.

jorgekafkazar
April 27, 2010 9:48 am

Ask us again after everything is implemented and restored. I haven’t seen enough of the new features to say, one way or another.
After final set-up, if anyone has problems finding the links, etc.: Sometimes in Firefox, WordPress sites end up with the right column contents pushed all the way to the bottom. An hour or two on the internet will give you the solution. Or you could just go ahead and do View Zoom Reset.

Dusty
April 27, 2010 9:48 am

I like the format, though the other was good, too.
The text ought to be darker., especially for the smaller notational text, but also for the posts. Is that a function of the font or did you select a gray scale color for it?
A suggestion. You save a lot of space in the right column for other things if you put the archives in a pull down menu.
Another suggestion. Add the feature for the left column auto-width. If bookmarks are open, the right column gets pushed off the screen.

April 27, 2010 9:49 am

Sidebar widgets not working in IE or Firefox.
Frankly, I liked the old layout/theme better. If it ain’t broke, don’t fix it. Millions of visitors to the old theme should tell you something.
Or, if you want to get a makeover, I suggest a 3-column theme with one large column for content on the left and two righthand sidebars for widgets.
None of this addresses the meta issue of mass communication of cutting-edge science and policy. Anthony, please email me so that we can discuss some high level meta ideas and a proposal that you may find very interesting.

Sean Peake
April 27, 2010 9:49 am

I appreciate the larger font but need a few moments to get used to it. It’s like moving the furniture in a blind man’s house—it will take some adjusting to find the links etc that I use every day.

Coalsoffire
April 27, 2010 9:49 am

I think you will get the sidebar links figured out as soon as you begin to believe that we can’t see them. Otherwise the whole effect is too washed out. Otherwise this site is the greatest.

rbateman
April 27, 2010 9:50 am

The Widgets came back up the right side to the top, you must have fixed that.
The text is now a set size, unable to change it.
What a shock it was to see the new layout after hitting the Post Comment button.

April 27, 2010 9:50 am

Hey hey, the sidebar widgets just kicked in. Now working in IE and Firefox.

tommy
April 27, 2010 9:51 am

I gave it a try on my Amiga system using OWB and the links shows up fine there.
REPLY: Amiga? wow, well I draw the line at Timex Sinclair. -A

Sean Peake
April 27, 2010 9:51 am

Yea! They’re back!

Dusty
April 27, 2010 9:52 am

Is the “Your comment is awaiting moderation” feature gone? That was nice to see at least for knowing the comment didn’t get lost in the Internet.

Philip T. Downman
April 27, 2010 9:53 am

Very good. Neat fonts that facilitates the reading process. Serifs are important in a running text to keep the word images together.
Yes, facilities like widgets and all will sure be back soon when it is done.

Darrin
April 27, 2010 9:54 am

Love it! So much easier on my eyes it makes WUWT even more pleasurable to read.

Sean Peake
April 27, 2010 9:54 am

A suggestion: Can you put back the Home page link on your top nav?

Rick
April 27, 2010 9:54 am

I’m not a designer, but I would prefer to see the title and the “Commentary…by..” actually inside of the header image, it would be more concise.
And the background looks nice being white, but a black background will be more energy efficient since those pixels won’t have to fire…using less energy :).
Other than that it looks great!
Rick

Stu
April 27, 2010 9:55 am

” Erik says:
April 27, 2010 at 9:13 am
Big Al will be very pleased I’m sure, the picture on his blog show him in front of 3 very big carbon footprinting monitors [rollseyes] – well, don’t do as I do, do as…”
I’m guessing He needs three monitors to display all of the latest science coming in daily which says it’s worse than we thought? Either that or he is a secret computer game junkie and plays flight simulators on a Matrox triplehead2go setup Tipper bought him for XMAS 😉
On topic- I’m too missing the widget/gadgets on the right side of the page (using firefox here). I really like the new text but overall I find the display a bit too light overall (puts extra strain on the eyes, especially at night). Minimal is good but perhaps this is just a little too minimal for my taste. Maybe if the background was a slightly darker grey?
Whatever works for you, Sir Anthony.

Francisco
April 27, 2010 9:55 am

Looks good. But it would be better with non-serif fonts – always easier on the eyes.

mcfarmer
April 27, 2010 9:57 am

I’m still thanking my dogs for destroying my old computer. Your site looks great on windows 7 and a 27″ screen.

Peter
April 27, 2010 9:57 am

The smaller text is much easier to read

Scott B
April 27, 2010 9:58 am

Big improvement I think. I especially like the larger font. Much better for the 1600×1200 resolution I run here and 1920×1200 at home.
Also, the links and widgets are working fine for me in Firefox.

Editor
April 27, 2010 9:58 am

Theme selections can be a tough choice. I also think it is a ‘personal’ taste issue. I prefer a warmer environment such as my blog used to be. After a period I was able to adjust to a newer, fresher, higher-tech, look which I now use while still maintaining somewhat of a warm comfort feeling. http://www.leekington.com/climatebuzz/ But,… that is me.
I am presently slightly more limited in image size than this test theme you have. However, I opted to leave ample space for snippets and article titles. (I also have special accommodation for the WUWT titles).
Bottom line Anthony.. WUWT is your home. I will sit in any chair (theme) offered and be content with the offerings of a gracious host.
Sincere Regards,
Lee Kington
Text size is never an issue for me. Most of the time I run a high resolution and on some sites still zoom out or restyle them on locally.

April 27, 2010 10:01 am

The left hand blank column [to the left of the text column] serves no purpose and should go.
REPLY: There is no ” left hand blank column” that’s just background -A

kadaka (KD Knoebel)
April 27, 2010 10:02 am

I can live with it it.
Suggestions:
1. Old title at top, light text on dark background, looked better. Also, the yellow text of CA Assistant at top right is pretty well washed out on the white background. A dark block across the top would make everything look spiffy.
2. Sans serif font. Looks more “scientific-y” while this serif font looks more “literature-y.”
3. Needs separators between stories, things were “blurring together” a bit on the main page.
BTW, are you aware of how many additional thousands of megawatts all your millions of viewers will now consume worldwide from having to display so much more white? Better get some more LED lights to offset it. 😉

Noelene
April 27, 2010 10:03 am

I like it.I can see all the links on the side,have to scroll across to see them.A wide margin on the left,but I guess that is for the bigger screen.I haven’t looked on the laptop yet,it will probably be better on that.

crossopter
April 27, 2010 10:05 am

IMO too bright – the background washes-out the finer font. Perhaps text a little darker?
I’ve also acted by reducing text size to 90% of the re-set.
No problems with the right-hand stuff – all present
Certainly looks fresh tho :-]

Milwaukee Bob
April 27, 2010 10:06 am

Love it. Looks great on my i-Mac. all the links are there and they work. No H scroll bar at the bottom but do not need it, the window is open wide enough and then some.
AND, thank you for the HTML tags info just below this box. I’m always miss-placing (do not use them enough) my old cheat-sheet, now I don’t have to go searching. 🙂

Dave Worley
April 27, 2010 10:08 am

Hey, I think your banner is my desktop image. It’s one of my favorite NASA images, taken from aboard the ISS. The whole image shows a crescent moon peeking through the atmosphere.

Tenuc
April 27, 2010 10:10 am

Sorry Anthony, but I too am having problems seeing anything on the right hand side of the screen and no scroll bar is visible. The font you are useing is less clear to read than before, appearing rather faint and spindly. I also get a list of HTML tag use info under the ‘Post Comment’ box, which is useful very, thanks.
If I run Firefox using the ‘no style’ option in the view menu, the links do appear as a long list at the very bottom or the screen when I scroll down. However, doing this screws up all the top header info and pictures, so is not a viable option!
I’m running XP Pro (SP2) on a 3yo Dell laptop with a 1024 x 768 display. Browser is Firefox 3.6, fully updated.

Oldjim
April 27, 2010 10:12 am

I like the larger font although it doesn’t make much difference to me as I had set Firefox to enlarge the old forum by default.
One thing – there seems to be a lot of wasted space around each post which requires more scrolling

Dave Worley
April 27, 2010 10:13 am

The new banner also depicts “Nature’s Thermostat” in action!

April 27, 2010 10:14 am

They are there, try the horizontal scrollbar or set your monitor to a higher resolution

Or you could accomodate different resolutions by using CSS that gracefully handles them, rather than assuming that you know what resolution is best.
REPLY: I’d rather have my eyes gouged out with hot pokers than try editing CSS, beyond Greek to me -A

George E. Smith
April 27, 2010 10:14 am

Hey Anthony, It looks good to me.
I spend 10 hours a day in front of this high class calculator; and with my eyes I need all the help I can get. Even when it is doing the work for me, I need to see when it screws up, and redirect it; so it is nice to read comfortably while I am waiting for the machine to cough.

tmtisfree
April 27, 2010 10:14 am

I thought at first I was at the OpenMind website. Humpff…

Alea Jacta Est
April 27, 2010 10:15 am

Anthony,
Clean and crisp, great for hi-res, but miss the “Home” link that used to get me right back to the main page, now you’ve just got “About….Projects…..” etc…
Alea.

geo
April 27, 2010 10:16 am

My 24″ monitor thanks you!
REPLY: yeah, that’s what I author on. -A

wws
April 27, 2010 10:16 am

Looks good now, and I like it. Good update.

Robert of Ottawa
April 27, 2010 10:21 am

UPDATE: all the sidebar widgets are now restored. -A
Not on the first page
REPLY: that’s what the refresh button is for, unless you are running IE, which never seems to work right. -A

Anna
April 27, 2010 10:23 am

Love the larger text, but I preferred the black “header”. All that white looks a bit unfinished and empty, but perhaps I’m just being conservative.

etudiant
April 27, 2010 10:24 am

Like the new format!
I’m nearsighted and now can read the larger type without needing to take off my glasses.

slp
April 27, 2010 10:25 am

It looks good, although the masthead uses too much vertical real estate. Maybe you could make the image a background behind a light-colored blog title and description.

YtheH
April 27, 2010 10:25 am

Why is it that every website in existence seems to find it necessary to reinvent itself every three years?
What happened to “If it ain’t broke, don’t mess with it?”

April 27, 2010 10:27 am

Leif Svalgaard says:
REPLY: There is no ” left hand blank column” that’s just background -A
I guess my screen is just too wide. When I narrow the window, the ‘background’ goes away.

Stu
April 27, 2010 10:29 am

Background tone is very nice now 🙂 Much easier on the eyes, much better balance visually.

phlogiston
April 27, 2010 10:30 am

I like it – a big improvement. More space, better layout, nicer fonts, a more professional feel, nicer to look at.
I agree with a previous poster that the top photo could be higher resolution. The Josh cartoon of AW should be a permanent feature somewhere.

kwik
April 27, 2010 10:30 am

I miss the HOME button.

kadaka (KD Knoebel)
April 27, 2010 10:32 am

Alea Jacta Est says:
April 27, 2010 at 10:15 am
(…)
Clean and crisp, great for hi-res, but miss the “Home” link that used to get me right back to the main page, now you’ve just got “About….Projects…..” etc…
(…)

The “Watts Up With That?” title on top will take you back to the home page.
———
Wow, new time format to get used to. And still no note that it’s Pacific (West Coast) time.
Why not just change the time to UTC? This site is seen worldwide, UTC would “share the pain” and ultimately make for a better experience.

Magnus Olert
April 27, 2010 10:33 am

I would prefer a smaller text font.

AndrewWH
April 27, 2010 10:34 am

Like it Anthony. I no longer need to crank up the zoom.
I can also confirm I can see widgets in both IE8 and Opera 10.51

Steve W.
April 27, 2010 10:35 am

I like it, but PLEASE work on the iPhone version. When viewing with an iPhone, the font is way too small, and you have disabled the pinch-zoom! The font size button at the bottom does little or nothing to help. Thanks!
REPLY: I have no control over the iPhone version, that’s wordpress.com

David Holliday
April 27, 2010 10:36 am

It looks like I’m in the minority but I’m not a big fan. While I like the larger font I think things are too spreadout. Like someone earlier said, I’d like the pages to be more densely formatted. There is too much scrolling for the same amount of information as before.

Mike Fox
April 27, 2010 10:39 am

I like the larger type, but I’m not so hot to trot on the greyish font color.
I agree with Anna that the all white looks kinda stark, but it’s definitely easier to read.
I don’t see a horizontal scroll bar on my old PowerBook G4 12″ running Safari, but that’s because everything fits on its little screen, looks just fine, and doesn’t need the scroll bar.
Also, the pic at the top needs to be higher res.
Other than that, I’m fine with it. I’m here for content, not glamor!

Nib
April 27, 2010 10:40 am

I love the bigger typeface. I now don’t have to peer at the copy and can sit up straight to see Watt’s Up.

April 27, 2010 10:42 am

David Holliday says:
April 27, 2010 at 10:36 am
While I like the larger font I think things are too spreadout. Like someone earlier said, I’d like the pages to be more densely formatted. There is too much scrolling for the same amount of information as before.
Use a modern browser that allows you to control the font and density. E.g. Google’s Chrome, where CTRL+ makes the font bigger, CTRL- makes it smaller.

Brian Johnson uk
April 27, 2010 10:43 am

Looks fine to me but if you want to play some more the world and this site is your oyster.
The lack of an edit facility – why do I spot the spelling errors only after sending, ensures I will have to check more thoroughly – means no change there then.
Looking forward to the next few months when every tornado and hurricane will no doubt be Al Gore’s proof of the “Tipping Point” once more as he gets more desperate to increase his carbon offset trading scams.
The format suits my Mac G5 – thanks Anthony and KUTGW with WUWT

Joseph Murphy
April 27, 2010 10:44 am

all side links are pushed to the bottom of the page for me. They appeare below the last post.

Robert M. Marshall
April 27, 2010 10:45 am

Like the forces of nature, nothing, not even the WUWT website is constant and that is as it should be. While I see no apparent trends, calamitous or benign, I see the change and welcome it. To do otherwise would be to embrace stagnation.

Andy
April 27, 2010 10:47 am

Too much white blank space, The characters are grey. If you are going to use this much white space you should make the characters darker. My screen is 23 inches.
I liked the older format better.

Jim Carson
April 27, 2010 10:48 am

I like it. It’s cleaner, and more articulate.

Oldjim
April 27, 2010 10:49 am

My previous post seems to have vanished so here it is again,
The larger font is useful although I had Firefox set to automatically enlarge it anyway.
Can the space around the posts be reduced as it makes for a lot of scrolling

E.M.Smith
Editor
April 27, 2010 10:50 am

So, a question:

Does this theme still handle a preformatted table such that it puts a scroll bar on it and lets the lines be quite long but you can scroll over to see them, or does it truncate like some others?

Looks like wide tables will truncate right…

R.S.Brown
April 27, 2010 10:52 am

Anthony,
I went downstairs, unloaded & reloaded the dishwasher, started it, and
came back up.
All the links on the right hand side are now displaying beautifully.
…an obvious case of cause and effect.

E.M.Smith
Editor
April 27, 2010 10:54 am

Trying to read all the comments, I have to second the notion that it’s too bright. I’m going snow blind…

Tim Clark
April 27, 2010 10:55 am

crossopter says:
April 27, 2010 at 10:05 am
IMO too bright – the background washes-out the finer font. Perhaps text a little darker?
I’ve also acted by reducing text size to 90% of the re-set.
No problems with the right-hand stuff – all present

Ditto! Maybe you could set the contrast to lighten and darken correlated to sunspot number ;~P

April 27, 2010 10:55 am

You can please all of the people some of the time. To each their own. :o) I reckon it’s okay. It’s not offensive – which is definitely a plus – and it’s far more readable now. It’s a much more basic visual than it was, and I don’t know if that’s a sign of progress or not. I rather liked the old theme, myself. I’d have liked to see some coding improvements, like a bbcode editor for comments or a few handy “share-this” buttons or some-such-like, but I’ve no idea about integration with wordpress so I don’t have a clue what control you have over the HTML side of things. On balance, I’m positive :o)

Tim Clark
April 27, 2010 10:59 am

Except now the right hand stuff is at the bottom, below the post comment button. Something I can fix? Vista and Explorer.
REPLY: Vista and IE? Gawd help you. – A

vigilantfish
April 27, 2010 11:00 am

Further feedback. The ads and new postings on the main page are harder to distinguish from each other (the ads particularly confuse things, and I know you have no control over them). Would it be possible to put lines between postings, or use some other means to demarcate them? While we may decry the blitherings of the lame stream media here, newspapers with excellent layout (a feature to which I became sensitive as a high-school newspaper editor in ancient times) use lines to separate articles for a reason – it’s easier to see where one feature stops and the next begins.

April 27, 2010 11:04 am

Improved readability, definitely. I’m not mad about it, but it’s decidedly better and less packed. Line spacing helps a lot.
Regarding the bar on the right side, people can zoom in and out using Control + mouse wheel.

Jason Bair
April 27, 2010 11:10 am

Looks good on this 1920×1200 monitor. Not sure how it will look on my laptop @1368×768

R.S.Brown
April 27, 2010 11:14 am

Anthony:
UPDATE:
The right hand links are now displaying a line or two after the
“leave a Reply” and the box to check for “Notify me of follow up…”
This is happening on the home page following:
http://wattsupwiththat.com/2010/04/21/second-mann-spoof-video-removed/
and on each of the article pages.
I went back, wipe the history and web sites tree from my Naviscope, clear all
the Temporary Internet files and offline content, wiped out the usual stored
temporary cookies, did a Disc cleanup and a file defragmentation.
Upon coming back, the right side links are still “down below”.
This is almost as interesting as eBay’s site changes and tweeking in their
second year of operations. Of course, their staff of 150+ programmers did
most of the changes after 1:00 AM EDT.

View from the Solent
April 27, 2010 11:18 am

R.S.Brown says:
April 27, 2010 at 10:52 am
Anthony,
I went downstairs, unloaded & reloaded the dishwasher, started it, and
came back up.
All the links on the right hand side are now displaying beautifully.
…an obvious case of cause and effect.
———————————————————–
But does that agree with your robust model?

April 27, 2010 11:19 am

I like it so far. Let’s see how it look with a post with graphics as well as text.
Running on 30″ Mac monitors

April 27, 2010 11:25 am

Didn’t there used to be a link at the top to the home page? Can’t seem to find that. A handy way to get back to home & see all the posts.
I did check out a regular post with the new format & it looked great.

April 27, 2010 11:26 am

I like the new lay out. The white is awfully bright, I dimmed my brightness 70% to make it comfortable. I have an old HP pavilion 17″ on a dell dimension with XP and Firefox.

martyn
April 27, 2010 11:27 am

Crisp and clear, I think I’m going snow blind, where did I put my shades.

HotRod
April 27, 2010 11:27 am

Where’s the ‘HOME’ button, i use it a lot?
[Click right on “Watts Up With That.” ~dbs]

April 27, 2010 11:27 am

I may change opinion – when I forget the difference – but I join the conservative readers who preferred the old theme. The new one has many advantages etc. but it looks too simple, structureless, in a way.
Also, I suppose that the new theme has many more characters per line. I actually find it unfortunate because it’s easier to read when you don’t have to move your eyes too much to the left – a possible error of re-reading the same line etc.

Tim Clark
April 27, 2010 11:33 am

Tim Clark says:
April 27, 2010 at 10:59 am
Except now the right hand stuff is at the bottom, below the post comment button. Something I can fix? Vista and Explorer.
REPLY: Vista and IE? Gawd help you. – A

Yeah, Government issue and low bidder.

Tim Clark
April 27, 2010 11:37 am

R.S.Brown says:
April 27, 2010 at 10:52 am
Anthony,
I went downstairs, unloaded & reloaded the dishwasher, started it, and
came back up.
All the links on the right hand side are now displaying beautifully.
…an obvious case of cause and effect.
———————————————————–
View from the Solent says:
April 27, 2010 at 11:18 am
But does that agree with your robust model?

I’m sure his wife agreed with R.S. doing the dishes!

Mr Green Genes
April 27, 2010 11:37 am

I use Ubuntu 9.10 + Firefox 3.5.9 and it looks good here.

R.S.Brown
April 27, 2010 11:39 am

Re: View from the Solent (April 27, 2010 at 11:18 am):
I used to have a robust model, but she left me for a man in the motor trade.

April 27, 2010 11:40 am

Graphics test:
Photobucket

keith at hastings UK
April 27, 2010 11:42 am

Looks good to me. I use IE8 in XP and a 1600 x 900 monitor, and can see all of the stuff. Usually go to 125% or 150% zoom for ease of reading, and get a bar at the bottom with 150% … new format looks clearer actually.
Thanks for all you do.

Michael Larkin
April 27, 2010 11:42 am

I think I preferred the old set up, but imo this one could be improved by:
1. Less white space – seems so empty and unappealing – lacks the old compulsion to read more than one already has.
2. The text for posts would be much better sans serif (always works better on a screen), and also, darker as I’m struggling to read it.

P Walker
April 27, 2010 11:42 am

Now that you’ve fixed the right side problem , things are much better . I will have to agree with some that the screen seems a tad bright , but in general it is more readable . One little nit , though : I preferred the way you posted the date in the upper right corner of each comment . It made it easier to sort through the comments on older postings – I always hit “end” and scroll upwards , especially in the Tips and Notes section .

Ben U.
April 27, 2010 11:44 am

The large image at the top tends to keep much or all of the latest post’s title from appearing until the reader scrolls down. If you created a smaller version of the image, you would also save on bandwidth. Right now it’s 75KB.
I don’t think the font needs to be so large if you make it sufficiently dark.

Al Cooper
April 27, 2010 11:44 am

View, Text Size does not work.
Let me adjust the text size again and I might like it.
As it is now….NO

H.R.
April 27, 2010 11:46 am

I voted “Love It”… however, that vote is for everything but the added scroll-down time.

Ted Clayton
April 27, 2010 11:47 am

Anthony, I’m surprised you have the red-hot poker reflex to CSS! 😉
I have a nice ~8 yo XP box, usually running Ubuntu these days, but on XP at the moment. Back on Linux soon.
Since I was warned … my subjective impression that page-download took significantly longer, is of course suspect. I have DSL now, but it’s rock-bottom service with a guarantee of 256k MAX. It’s usually just under that: ‘sposed to increase as our infrastructure improves. I was dialup until last fall: only thing available, fairly unique situation (I surfed with images turned off).
I have an agreeable ProView 14″ diag LCD with 1024 x 768. The new format fit the width without a sign of trouble (your “fluid width” CSS is what it should be). This is the most important factor.
I’ve ran WordPress on my own remote-hosted server for several years and found the system very stable. One does get more flexibility, if he can at least mumble some pidgin-CSS. 😉
Congratulations on the nice new theme!

Ben U.
April 27, 2010 11:48 am

(2nd attempt – this time with Javascript enabled).
The image at the top is so large that it tends to keep the most or all of the latest post’s title from appearing until the reader scrolls down. If you were to create a smaller version of the image (i.e., don’t merely specify a smaller size in the html markup), then it would also use less bandwidth. Currently it’s 75KB.
The main text font wouldn’t need to be so large if you were to make it dark enough.

robhon
April 27, 2010 11:49 am

Just curious. Why don’t you have Skeptical Science listed in the side bar as a Pro AGW website?
REPLY: give me a reason to do so when the kid proprietor is openly hostile towards me. -A

April 27, 2010 11:51 am

Smokey says: April 27, 2010 at 11:40 am
Graphics test:

The graphic looks perfectly normal.
The subject doesn’t.
Which is, I guess, normal…

Rick M
April 27, 2010 11:52 am

New theme is very cool. Works well on Explorer, Firefox and Chrome.

Steve Keohane
April 27, 2010 11:53 am

Love the new look on XP w/ Firefox 3.6.3. Looks like it’s all there and easier to read.

DCC
April 27, 2010 11:56 am

“And the background looks nice being white, but a black background will be more energy efficient since those pixels won’t have to fire…using less energy :).”
Oh, no. Never a black background. They always force me to use readability.
http://lab.arc90.com/experiments/readability/

Al Cooper
April 27, 2010 11:56 am

In effect this has changed my reading font from 10 to 30.
Not good.

Ian P
April 27, 2010 11:58 am

Presentation’s fine and no glitches on my version of XP and Firefox. What I would suggest, though, is that the white background’s too bright. How about a nice, restful pale green (or an option for the user to change the background?

Tom
April 27, 2010 11:59 am

I basically hate change of all kinds, so my reaction is “eh” at best. But it’s your blog, you should do whatever makes you happy.

Emil
April 27, 2010 12:04 pm

why is everybody shouting ? … I see lots of small caps being used …

Pom
April 27, 2010 12:05 pm

On my Win7 computer in Firefox most text is displayed with “small-caps”. I.e. capital style letters, slightly shrunk. I find it alot harder to read. Are everybody shouting suddenly?

April 27, 2010 12:06 pm

Perhaps I’m just not used to it, but I find an upper and lower case font more readable than Small Caps. That said, it looks very crisp and cool.

Dr. Axel F.
April 27, 2010 12:07 pm

The text is very hard to read. Please change the font!

David Hall
April 27, 2010 12:07 pm

Much too sparse for me, I can only assume it is change for changes sake – rarely a good idea. In point of fact, your site does not comply with UK ‘rules’ on access for the partly-sighted. In practical terms, for example, changing the browser font size has no effect. You are also supposed to allow the colours of various text objects to be changed (colour blindness you know).
In neither case does anyone give a monkeys, because in reality the UK oversight on websites has no teeth at all, especially for overseas websites. Although once my local chamber of commerce gave me a tug about our website content – terms of supply etc etc, but that just illustrates how profoundly stupid government is in this country – at all levels.

anna v
April 27, 2010 12:09 pm

The climate audit assistant http://climateaudit.org/ca-assistant/
worked here too for editing.
With the new format the “Reply with link” link has been lost, as well as the colored highlighting according to the choice of hours since the posting appeared.
Maybe the author should be contacted?
The “Preview” works

CRS, Dr.P.H.
April 27, 2010 12:10 pm

Looks great, Anthony! I’m using Mac OS 10.5.8 with the Safari browser, all links to the right-hand side are present and functional.
….wish I could say that for our government!! Rock on, Chuck the DrPH

April 27, 2010 12:10 pm

cooling iphone burning scientists

Shona
April 27, 2010 12:11 pm

Not too keen.
Why is it all in capitals? It’s hard to read and FEELS LIKE SHOUTING
I too have to put a smaller size on the fonts.

April 27, 2010 12:12 pm

Previous posts now seem to be in Arial font.
This one has reverted to your previous font.

Krishna Gans
April 27, 2010 12:13 pm

The serife types are better for reading ( New Times, s th l th), than without. It’s easier to follow the lines while reading

Phil.
April 27, 2010 12:15 pm

I don’t like the all upper case font.

Hoi Polloi
April 27, 2010 12:16 pm

Much better, keep it.

ecph
April 27, 2010 12:16 pm

Layout is nice, but here are some suggestions:
* Use black text instead of gray. High contrast makes things more readable.
* Remove the 20px gray margin at the very top. (This is to get content as high up as possible)
* “Watts Up With That?” could be pushed into the top-left of the banner. That would save an additional 80 pixels.
Current layout:
http://img85.imageshack.us/img85/9118/ss20100427211228.png
Sample of suggested layout (made using Firebug):
http://img85.imageshack.us/img85/926/ss20100427211340.png

April 27, 2010 12:17 pm

Shona:
I think it’s your browser. I don’t get all caps.

Dillon
April 27, 2010 12:23 pm

I like the larger text, but all of the blogroll/links/ads on the side are way down at the bottom of the page. If lots of people are having this issue, I would bet that you will see a decrease in your click-through rates for those ads.
The old format didn’t fill up a large monitor, but it was stylish and crisp. I would be happy if it returned.

Tenuc
April 27, 2010 12:23 pm

Thanks Anthony, the right hand side is back!
Font is still a bit thin and pale, and the stark white background is hard on my poor old eyes. Any chance you could make it darker?

April 27, 2010 12:26 pm

Works well for me. Before, when I did the zoom, the text would get hidden behind the right side bar. Now I do not have that issue, I can zoom in and see everything the same as it was, only bigger.

April 27, 2010 12:26 pm

Cleaner, marginally easier-to-read fonts and everything works just like the old one did for me – I run a bog standard straight-out-of-the-box PC about 5 yrs old, with XP and IE6 on a cable broadband that gives good video streaming. The site was nice in its old guise but the new look is a tad easier on my eyes. The banner graphic is conservative and the pic you use is great.

Editor
April 27, 2010 12:27 pm

It’s okay, I like the date/time stamp, better than the 3 numbers in the corner. Too American, though.
I strongly dislike the gray text. No book I have at home is printed with gray ink. Is that a gesture to Bill Livingston’s fading sunspots? (Just kidding, I realize its merely trendy, but trendy isn’t necessarily good.)
About time you include some HTML instructions! 🙂 What’s this < all about: test of del. The last I tried, <cite> was useless, I’ll try it from home. Do you have control over the HTML blurb? It would be nice to have a good one.
This may blow out my Python code that creates the summaries at http://home.comcast.net/~ewerme/wuwt/ – I’ll check that out from home too but won’t change it for a while.
Let me try an image of a thermometer log .
The little WordPress traffic count smiley face is still at the bottom. Yay. Now in the center instead of the lower left.

JimB
April 27, 2010 12:28 pm

Change for changes sake?
JimB

kadaka (KD Knoebel)
April 27, 2010 12:29 pm

Tom says:
April 27, 2010 at 11:59 am
I basically hate change of all kinds, so my reaction is “eh” at best. But it’s your blog, you should do whatever makes you happy.

And something that makes him happy is when the consumer is happy. As both a businessman and a TV/radio personality, he knows about giving the public what they want. And also knows when “what they want” is not what they need which they will be happier with instead. 😉

Ale Gorney
April 27, 2010 12:30 pm

Has that bland/boring stock look to it while the previous theme was pretty exciting (relatively.) At least have a contest for your readers to create a replacement for that mind numbing banner at the top of the front page.

wsbriggs
April 27, 2010 12:31 pm

Love the clean look. In Firefox 3.5.9 everything is well visible, font looks like Times Roman.

Editor
April 27, 2010 12:32 pm

What’s this <del> all about: test of del.
Oops – my typo on <del>. So, it’s an <strike> with a date stamp? At least the timestamp shows up in the HTML source.

Tim
April 27, 2010 12:37 pm

Just how old are you? Even at close to 50 this font size is ridiculous. I have to hit ” ctrl – ” in firefox just to get things to fit. Are you trying a late April fool’s joke?
I can read this from across the room. Too funny. Must be a slow news day for the A man. Other than the font it’s okay 😉

Zeke the Sneak
April 27, 2010 12:39 pm

Still looks like “Commentary on puzzling things in life, nature, science, weather, climate change, technology, and recent news by Anthony Watts,” so it’s a winner! 🙂
Look at all those tags.

roger
April 27, 2010 12:41 pm

I agree with Tenuc – the stark white has always been a torture to my old eyes. I never complained before but, since you are changing things around at this time, perhaps you could consider those who suffer from dry-eye (symptoms are the opposite) and other age related visual impairments.
That apart, the changes are very much for the better and I love them!!!!!!

Al Gored
April 27, 2010 12:44 pm

I like it. Easier to read, except for the type in the banner.
But its already clogged up with “deniers.”

Diego Cruz
April 27, 2010 12:45 pm

Too much vertical white space. Looks like it could easily be cut by 50%. Otherwise it is good.

Al Gored
April 27, 2010 12:48 pm

And it would be nice to have more voting options.
I can’t say that I “love” it but its better than just OK. Just to stay positive I will temporarily fall in love with it and vote accordingly.

Steven K
April 27, 2010 12:48 pm

I like the layout, and concur with the others that this is YOUR house and I’m just pleased to be able to come visit. But since you requested feedback, it would help me if the comments carried a sequential number in addition to the date/time stamp (see Jo Nova’s site for one example). Often one commenter will refer to another person’s input and though it is possible to use the date/time stamp to find my way from one comment to another, the number system makes this process much easier.

Editor
April 27, 2010 12:50 pm

Smokey says:
April 27, 2010 at 11:40 am
> Graphics test:
No fair – it works for you, doesn’t work for me.
Hmm, let me copy what shows up in the source:

This page is doing an incremental scroll, the main page isn’t, is that a new tweak? Pain in the butt for scanning a page looking for a particular comment.

Mark C
April 27, 2010 12:51 pm

In general I like the layout and theme, but don’t care for the font. Also agree somewhat with making the background a little darker than #FFFFFF. Tightening up the whitespace vertically would be nice too. Overall a push.

Ryan C
April 27, 2010 12:51 pm

I’m sure it’s nice, but since I use a netbook it was convenient for everything to be smaller. I guess I’m the minority but I liked the old setup.

wayne
April 27, 2010 12:53 pm

Anthony, Ben U. thought you need to reduce the resolution of pic at top, don’t, it will only make the picture fuzzy, I checked, it is res sized and compressed correct. He also thought making font smaller, don’t, he must be a youngster, my font size is now at Largest setting and at 100% zoom and any smaller I could not read it. At these settings, Largest type size and 100% zoom the type appears to be about 10 point from a typographer’s aspect. (I will miss Lucida Sans though and the type is a bit too grey, maybe halfway between current grey and black!)
I agree with others, the logo is too close to realclimate and needs the SUN, don’t leave the sun out, but the clouds and vapor is great, that tells the whole story!

Stephen Brown
April 27, 2010 12:53 pm

Anthony,
I like the re-design but this is a matter of personal preference. The most important thing about WUWT is the content. You could inscribe with goose-quill on parchment. scanned onto the server and people would still come to read what has become internationally recognised as the world’s leading climate/weather/what’s-it-doing-outside-today blog!
Keep up the good work!

Ryan C
April 27, 2010 12:53 pm

Oh and on the old page, I could have 3 or 4 comments up on my screen at once.. where this is so big, I have to scroll down after each and every comment to read the next one. Call me lazy, but it’s annoying LOL

Paul Vaughan
April 27, 2010 12:54 pm

Initial impressions:
1) Probably a mistake to put the poll up so soon (‘first-impression’ ‘knee-jerk’ sample). Advised: Largely disregard polling results & re-poll later.
2) Home page loads much faster – welcomed.
3) Main thing is one never has to scroll left-right to read individual lines of text (or adjust magnification to compensate). Sites with that issue are absolutely infuriating. (No problem here so far.) The opposite problem is nearly as irritating – i.e. everything squeezed into a stupidly narrow column – (again: no problem here on that front – actually better now than before).
4) Like the grey text. Recommended to readers: Try locking your browser to Arial font.
5) Larger comment-entry-box: welcome.
6) Older date-stamp was preferable, but this is definitely NOT a dealbreaker.
7) Other changes have my full support so far (but it’s early days).

dr.bill
April 27, 2010 12:55 pm

As several others have suggested, the look is fine, but the line-spacing (or perhaps line-height) is too large. No other problems.
/dr.bill

April 27, 2010 12:56 pm

I’m a bit worried that the increased albedo will trigger an iceage and snow blindness.

grzejnik
April 27, 2010 12:57 pm

Every website needs an update every couple of years. Great job! Some will not like it but if the design is sound and the look clean, and the features functional we all will be in great shape! Thanks!

dp
April 27, 2010 12:58 pm

It’s still mobile-friendly. That’s appreciated.

Bill Thomson
April 27, 2010 1:02 pm

It still does not display properly on my computer running XP Professional and IE 6.0. The right hand column with links and widgets starts at the very bottom of the page where the left hand column ends. (Below the comments section.)
I would like the purple text in the masthead better if it were more crisp looking. Everything else looks sharp and clean.
REPLY: IE6 won’t display many websites properly. I recommend upgrading to Firefox. I say this from experience, having been hardwired to IE6 myself for years. Firefox does it better, faster, cleaner. And it will import all your settings. – Anthony

April 27, 2010 1:10 pm

The new format looks good on my old Advent laptop.
Don’t ask its details I only type on it and give it the occassional bash.
Ok,it’s grey with a coffee ring stain in the right hand corner.
Seriously though.Thank you all at WUWT for doing a great job for us. from DaveUK.
Not to be confused with David UK who is innocent 🙂

April 27, 2010 1:11 pm

I like it Anthony – and I have found the RHS data links!

Hosco
April 27, 2010 1:15 pm

Shock to the system.
I’m sure I’ll get use to it after a bit.

April 27, 2010 1:17 pm

Anthony: I like it and as others said, if you like that is what is most important. I for one prefer other fonts on my laptop but on my 30″ Mac it all looks good.

phlogiston
April 27, 2010 1:20 pm

Leif Svalgaard says:
April 27, 2010 at 10:42 am
“E.g. Google’s Chrome, where CTRL+ makes the font bigger, CTRL- makes it smaller.”
Thanks – I use Google Chrome and didnt know that.

Editor
April 27, 2010 1:20 pm

Looks good. Now I can read the text without squinting.

Ben U.
April 27, 2010 1:23 pm

I had my font-setting on large for WUWT for so long that I forgot about it! Now I’ve put it back to normal.
So I don’t think that the new font size is too large after all, but it definitely should be darker. #222222 would be dark enough and would still leave the instances of jet-black #000000 text standing out with a little oomph. The image at the top no longer seems so very huge, but ecph’s suggestions should still all be used. You also still might try creating a smaller and lower-KB version of the image – it just doesn’t seem worth it at 75KB. Then you could move the right column up.

al in kansas
April 27, 2010 1:24 pm

I am getting black type on a black background. I can’ read it!!!
REPLY: You are the only one so far, probably your browser/OS settings

Physics Major
April 27, 2010 1:26 pm

I liked the old style with no horizontal scroll bar. Otherwise it seems ok.

Bob Stephens
April 27, 2010 1:30 pm

Anthony,
I like the wider text format – shows up nicely on my 10″ Dell netbook. At first I found I couldn’t see any of the sidebar, wiget etc, but then scrolled down past the comments and found them nicely on the right hand of my 1024 x 576 display. My big monitor at home shows everything o.k.
Bob Stepehens

Mohib
April 27, 2010 1:38 pm

No clear delineation of posts on home page — can’t see them at a glance but have to analyze and read the text to figure it all out.
Add some graphic elements to support the delineation visually, don’t just rely on white space and font changes.
Also Google advert on first page is too prominent.

kadaka (KD Knoebel)
April 27, 2010 1:45 pm

Steven K says:
April 27, 2010 at 12:48 pm
I like the layout, and concur with the others that this is YOUR house and I’m just pleased to be able to come visit. But since you requested feedback, it would help me if the comments carried a sequential number in addition to the date/time stamp (see Jo Nova’s site for one example). Often one commenter will refer to another person’s input and though it is possible to use the date/time stamp to find my way from one comment to another, the number system makes this process much easier.

Note the following feature: The time/date stamp under the name actually is a link that goes to that particular comment, with a unique comment number. When I quoted you, I re-linked the link for your original comment to the time/date stamp. You can use those links to directly refer to a specific comment. Just put the pointer on one, right click, select “copy link location” to get the full URL for the comment.

JayWiz
April 27, 2010 1:52 pm

finally my boss can read WUWT from his cubicle (from my monitor!)

Pete Olson
April 27, 2010 1:52 pm

It’s too spread out, and it’s hard to read, and perhaps the grey print is adding to this. I MUCH prefer the old layout. I hope you switch back, or do a compromise between old and new – this is difficult. Maybe black text?
(I have a graphics background.)

April 27, 2010 1:53 pm

I see a drop-shadowed background has appeared. Nice :o)
CSS is neither evil nor wrong, but it is probably a steep learning curve for the novice. Nevertheless, well worth getting your teeth into for an evening to get an understanding of how it does the things it does.

Warren
April 27, 2010 1:57 pm

Theme’s fine, but any chance we could get full feeds back via rss rather than their truncated versions?

Espen
April 27, 2010 2:00 pm

I like the old one better. The new theme could benefit from at least 1 point smaller font size and less white space.

Tom in Florida
April 27, 2010 2:06 pm

ecph says:
April 27, 2010 at 12:16 pm
Current layout:
http://img85.imageshack.us/img85/9118/ss20100427211228.png
Sample of suggested layout (made using Firebug):
http://img85.imageshack.us/img85/926/ss20100427211340.png
Agree with this post, like the suggested header layout.

Ben
April 27, 2010 2:07 pm

Did we lose the “Home” button at the top left?
It’s a convenient way to quickly get back to the top of the current day’s items.
Also, minor point, but the Photo at the top looks good, but the blue font with your info comes across looking a bit amateurish.
Overall, it’s a professional look. If you like it Anthony. Great.
Appreciate all the good content.
[Clicking on “Watts Up With That” at the top of any page will get you back to the home page. ~dbs, mod.]

pat
April 27, 2010 2:07 pm

prefer the new layout anthony…
27 April: UK Register: Global warming dirt-carbon peril models are wrong, say boffins
Greenhouse experiments show reduced greenhouse effect
The world may not be doomed after all, according to top American dirt scientists. Soil-dwelling microbes, expected in climate models to go into CO2-spewing “overdrive” as the world warms, refused to do so in experiments.
According to a statement released this week by the US National Science Foundation, which funded the research:
–Conventional scientific wisdom holds that even a few degrees of human-caused climate warming will shift fungi and bacteria that consume soil-based carbon into overdrive, and that their growth will accelerate the release of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere.–
This conventional wisdom now appears to be wrong, as research conducted by University of California ecologist Steve Allison have shown that in fact the carbon-eating microbes’ planet-busting activities are reduced, not increased, by warmth….
Allison cautions that more research is needed, but seems confident that the microbe menace is not as severe as had been thought…
Allison and his colleagues’ research appears online this week in Nature Geoscience
http://www.theregister.co.uk/2010/04/27/soil_microbe_peril_no/

Steamboat McGoo
April 27, 2010 2:08 pm

I’m neutral-and-moving-towards-positive about the new theme – but encourage the experimenting!

kernels
April 27, 2010 2:10 pm

The graphic at the top needs a few Category 5 hurricane whorls.

Sevan
April 27, 2010 2:12 pm

I don’t like change!
Reasonable grievances: the large, lighter colored text is more difficult to read than the old format. I also liked the narrow column of text.

Darkinbad the Brightdayler
April 27, 2010 2:12 pm

I’m trying hard to enthuse but I’m afraid I favour content over presentation

John from CA
April 27, 2010 2:16 pm

Very nice – try using the same Sans font for your “REPLY”, its easier to read in bold caps or just drop the caps.

JB1029
April 27, 2010 2:21 pm

Text is a bit on the large size imo.
It possible to have an option to switch text size perhaps since this seems to be a point of conflicting opinions? Zooming out on firefox simply shrinks everything which isn’t particularly optimal.

John from CA
April 27, 2010 2:27 pm

Test Cite

Test

Steve Garcia
April 27, 2010 2:32 pm

Anthony –
If you are reading comments this far down….
WIDGETS: I have a WordPress page, too, and I found out right away that different themes appear to wipe out widgets. Every theme seems to have a different mixture of what shows up. If you go back to the old theme, I believe you’ll find out the missing widgets show up again.

Luke
April 27, 2010 2:33 pm

It’s more difficult to distinguish between articles now. I’d appreciate some sort of even/odd shading of articles. The white background is pretty hard on my eyes as well.

Steve Garcia
April 27, 2010 2:34 pm

Oops! I meant to add this before posting:
Anthony, I think the paragraphs are too wide now for easy reading.
And the theme seems to present things as big blobs instead of the concise packets from before.
I voted “Hate It!” At least a 13 on a 1-10 scale.

Steve Garcia
April 27, 2010 2:37 pm

GO TO A 3-COLUMN THEME!
THIS SUCKS.
REPLY: Of course it does, because you are running the old theme WUWT used to use on your blog…

Al Cooper
April 27, 2010 2:39 pm

Please go back.
If you leave it this way, I can read it across the room
and I don”t have a room to cross.

TomRude
April 27, 2010 2:39 pm

Fonts are difficult to read.

Steve Garcia
April 27, 2010 2:41 pm

A –
That font is even more difficult to read. Too many words across each column and the vertical part of each letter is too thin.

Allen63
April 27, 2010 2:41 pm

LCD screens tend to be very bright — black text on a white background tends to be an “eyesore” (literally) for some. I turn my brightness down — but, that messes with photos and other wide gamut images.
I like sites that provide a non-bright-white background for text. Some go a dark background with light or white text.
If feasible, it might be worth a try to go to some less “in one’s face” background color. Although, even if you do, there are all those other “black on white” sites.

R.S.Brown
April 27, 2010 2:46 pm

The black serif font on the cream background is easy to read and looks great.

April 27, 2010 2:49 pm

For those who miss the smaller text size: press CTRL and use the scroll wheel in your mouse to reduce or increase the size. No big deal.
It will take three or four clicks backwards to get the desired size. Especially good for making your comments in the editing window. Clicking forward will increase the font size.
If you have not a scroll wheel in your mouse -well, get one soon!

Rebivore
April 27, 2010 2:51 pm

The font used for text is sans serif – not so easy to read as a serifed font. According to something I read a long time ago when proportionally-spaced fonts on screens were the bee’s knees (or is it bees’ knees?), a serifed font makes it 5-10% easier to read.

John from CA
April 27, 2010 2:57 pm

This text contains H2O sub text.
This text contains mc2 sup text.
2010 U.S. Greenhouse Gas Inventory Report
unordered list
Landfills accounted for approximately 22 percent of total U.S. anthropogenic methane (CH4) emissions in 2008.
wastewater treatment accounted for approximately 4 percent U.S. anthropogenic methane (CH4) emissions

bryan A
April 27, 2010 2:58 pm

In case noone has found them yet (I didn’t read through all the comments) The side bar links appear at the bottom of the comments section for non high def monitors (not wide screen format)

Mr. Alex
April 27, 2010 3:02 pm

New improved picture is much better!
Now perhaps to tone this bright white down a little bit…

Rebivore
April 27, 2010 3:02 pm

Huh? The font has just changed to serif!!! Either the moderator read my post and acted upon it immediately, or it’s my Windows XP SP3 that’s playing tricks on me (again).

John from CA
April 27, 2010 3:07 pm

2010 U.S. Greenhouse Gas Inventory Report
Superscript doesn’t appear to be working with the sup tag: MC2
REPLY: Never did AFAIK

Al Cooper
April 27, 2010 3:11 pm

Anthony. If it ain’t broke, don’t fix it.
If no one has complained, why did you change it?
If you leave it like this, it will be hard for me to read.
Perhaps that is why whoever suggested this suggested this.
Your site is much too important to degrade.
PLEASE don’t change.
REPLY: Too late

Stephan
April 27, 2010 3:11 pm

More drivel from you know who hahaha
http://sc25.com/index.php?id=176
Always . Ah well let them have another guess, its pretty harmless anyway. Basically getting closer and closer the David Archibalds predictions all the time.

Carsten Arnholm, Norway
April 27, 2010 3:13 pm

I prefer the old theme. The old font is easier to read. I have got a 24″ screen.
Not sure if the CA-assist plugin works anymore? (sorry if that has been covered already, I have not had time to read all the comments).
I don’t mind changing this, but I would prefer a more compact format. There is too much wasted space compared to earlier, IMHO.
In any case, please keep up the good work!

April 27, 2010 3:17 pm

In the Firefox browser (and probably others)
Tools / Options / Content
you can choose your default font and background color

April 27, 2010 3:27 pm

Wider view is better, in my opinion. For the life of me, I can’t figure out why they are using that constricted viewing window at CA. Question here is whether this is too wide. Screen has to tic from side to side for message writing.

INGSOC
April 27, 2010 3:32 pm

Well, scrolling through large comment threads is going to take an awful lot more time. Was already unwieldy at times. It is kind of like reading the magnified text for people with bad eyesight. Or a children’s book. I can see the need for a change, but…
meh.
I don’t however wish to seem ungrateful or overly critical. I guess I will warm to it. I hope

the_Butcher
April 27, 2010 3:32 pm

Things to do:
-Add custom meta Description & Keywords for SEO
-The 2nd tittle on your header should be left as Html text for SEO
those for starters…contact me for help if you want.

David Gladstone
April 27, 2010 3:43 pm

Everything looks great, easier to read and esthetically pleasing, What would be really great and supremely useful would be a button that takes you to the actual comment box here and avoid the painful drudgery of scrolling through hundreds of comments.
Good job on the redo!

Steve Balch
April 27, 2010 3:44 pm

Excellent site. Prefer the new layout. Change the blue text (the banner line) to white so it’s easier to read.

April 27, 2010 3:46 pm

Looks good to me on Mozilla/5.0 (X11; U; Linux i686; en-US; rv:1.9.2.3) Gecko/20100402 Namoroka/3.6.3, clean simple and uncluttered, my monitor is 1680 X 1050. On the old theme I usually zoomed to get easily readable text, now I don’t have to.

Paul Vaughan
April 27, 2010 3:51 pm

Item#6 of Paul Vaughan April 27, 2010 at 12:54 pm reconsidered (regarding date-stamp):
Just realized the new date-stamps are hyperlinks. If people know how to use “href”, the new system is superior and may cut down on lengthy quotes that build in redundancy.
One more note:
8) The spaces between paragraphs are *good*. Years of experience running online courses tells me that short paragraphs are the way to minimize reader fatigue and evade reader “skiing” (“ski”mming & “ski”pping).
Cheers.

Fred Harwood
April 27, 2010 3:51 pm

Like.

ErnieK
April 27, 2010 3:52 pm

Mr. Pete’s CA-assistant no longer works within the comment section (Preview and comment tools still seem to work though).
REPLY: It was never intended to work here, I never offered support for it. -A

Zeke the Sneak
April 27, 2010 4:03 pm

Eduardo Ferreyra says:
April 27, 2010 at 2:49 pm
For those who miss the smaller text size: press CTRL and use the scroll wheel in your mouse to reduce or increase the size. No big deal

Thank you Eduardo, very handy.

Dave Springer
April 27, 2010 4:13 pm

It’s all messed up! Almost unusable.
Oh hold it. I forgot I was using my cell phone browser.
Looks fine on my laptop!

AEGeneral
April 27, 2010 4:21 pm

Change we can believe in.
I like it.

Chuck
April 27, 2010 4:23 pm

I use a 1920×1200 display so a wider page is no problem but the default text size is at least one font size larger than it needs to be. The old size was fine. And yes, I can make it smaller but I don’t have to it for any other web pages.

DocattheAutopsy
April 27, 2010 4:24 pm

I don’t visit the site for the format. I visit it for the info. Ultimately, this all about your aesthetic, Anthony. Knock yourself out. 🙂

Konrad
April 27, 2010 4:31 pm

Anthony,
I think this new theme may need a little adjustment. I find the line spacing too large, and the separation between stories seems poorly defined. While I can change the scale of the page on my screen with the control key and mouse wheel, this does not reduce the visual confusion. I notice that titles are sometimes closer on the screen to the preceding story than to the story they relate to. Also the font size used for titles seems too close to the standard font size when it is set to bold.
On a more subjective note, I prefer sans serif fonts for emission pages (monitors etc.) and serif fonts for reflection pages (books, newspapers.)
That said layout changes will not stop me visiting your fantastic site.

John from CA
April 27, 2010 4:31 pm

Hi,
From the WordPress support forum, try adding the following to the theme css to support superscript.
.sup{font-size:xx-small; vertical-align:top;}
REPLY: I already tried and rejected the mega-lame-o wp.com css editor (I hate CSS anyway but deserves special recognition for lameness). It breaks the new theme. -A

April 27, 2010 4:38 pm

There’s a saying – “the better is a foe to the good”.
There where two groups before – a far too MANY happy people like me who didn’t have to touch anything to zoom in/out to read, and the “poor” readers not so lucky like the first ones and in minority.
Now, I belong to the UNhappy majority (?), and the few “richer” guys with 24″-27″ beasts are all smiles.
REPLY: I’ve personally tested it on Windows XP using Firefox 3.5 with a screen resolution of 1024×768 and it works just fine. IE6 on the other hand is a train wreck. – Anthony
The CHANGE’s in vogue? 🙂
Regards
P.S. According to research 1024×768 is _still_ the most used resolution.

SOYLENT GREEN
April 27, 2010 4:53 pm

Looks great.

April 27, 2010 4:54 pm

Hmmm … I’m neutral on the actual change …
Now, the next question, how does it look on the iPod Touch; since I’m not on the Cisco corporate LAN anymore I’ll have to give that a try over at the city Library WLAN tomorrow.
Now, a quick HTML test (the commands used will be duped using ampersand-prefixed LT and GT text for ‘show’ purposes as well):
<blockquote> <i>


This text should be quoted and italicized.

</i> </blockquote>
And back to normal text.
.
.

david
April 27, 2010 4:57 pm

needs a little colour, preferably on the right side bar, and clear a dividing line between the posts

Keith Minto
April 27, 2010 5:00 pm

Agree with Chuck@ 4:23, looks like you are getting ready for an older readership 🙂
I would like a font that increases the contrast, this one has too much grey. Lack of contrast is the main problem in reading fatigue.

Brute
April 27, 2010 5:03 pm

I hate change………

April 27, 2010 5:10 pm

Mr Watts,
But the font layout! Too big gaps between lines, too big font, and too big lines! And that serif font! Awful!
To put shortly – all the graphic parts and layout are too big!
And that’s what some readers tried to impart to you.
Wider screens are not for applications to be stretched broadly but to have two application windows open side by side.
Best regards

Don B
April 27, 2010 5:15 pm

I like WUWT so much that I wouldn’t complain whatever you do. However, you did ask.
I waited until I went home to comment on the issue which troubles so many, which is the disappearance or movement of the items on the right part of the blog. At home my laptop and wife’s desktop saw all of the widget items at the top of the page, just as they have always been.
At the office my older desktop saw the widgets moved towards the bottom of the page, and I have to scroll down almost to the bottom of the page to see them. If I don’t figure it out soon I will have to call on my daughter for help. That is, unless some of you kind commenters will take pity on those of us who were educated before Archimedes had a principle and offer detailed advice.

Girma
April 27, 2010 5:17 pm

Anthony
It is much, much better for my huge 24 inch monitor.
It is excellent.
Thanks.

Bcreekski
April 27, 2010 5:17 pm

Great on mobile (Android).

Girma
April 27, 2010 5:19 pm

Anthony
It does not have a link to HOME at the top left conrner of the menu bar.
[Click on “Watts Up With That” at the top of any page to get to the home page. ~ dbs, mod.]

April 27, 2010 5:21 pm

Don’t like it… The serif font is MUCH more difficult to read. If you change your stylesheet to specify Trebuchet MS, I’ve found that one to be very easy on the eyes and very fast to read.
At work, where wordpress images are blocked, it is black text on a gray background, with blue text titles and links. Not fond of that either. If you eliminate the gray edges, that will also go away, I think.
I like the old lighter title text on a black background. The new theme looks less polished. It really is a step backwards.
I liked the old “freshy” theme better. But you could take the elements you like from the new one, and the old one, creating your own new hybrid. I think you can open the two wordpress .xml stylesheets, compare them, and make the old theme do what you want for larger monitors, or create your own. Mine is a 28″, 1920×1200 and I’ve never had an issue (but I zoom mine in so it fills the screen anyway, can you say LARGE TEXT).
If anyone out there hasn’t tried it, press ctrl & roll the wheel on the mouse up and down to zoom almost any application. Nice feature.
Thanks Anthony, no offense, but it could be better.

Dave Wendt
April 27, 2010 5:29 pm

Add one more vote for a less North Pole at noon white for the background. The extra column width compromises readability for my old eyes. The width in the comments section is about the max that allows me to scan down the midline and grok the full line width without scanning.

Roger Carr
April 27, 2010 5:36 pm

Anthony notes: Sadly, no I still can’t offer an edit feature. wordpress.com hosting doesn’t support it.
But the Greasemonkey edit and preview (Firefox) continues to work in this new format for your site. This has all the features one could ask for.

AnonyMoose
April 27, 2010 5:43 pm

Thanks, Anthony. I requested comment permalinks just a couple of days ago, and now here they are. You’re very responsive to your readers. 🙂
I agree with others that the text is overly large. I prefer for sites to leave the default text size, assuming that the reader has set their browser to behave the way they want.

Alex G.
April 27, 2010 5:48 pm

Just a few notes:
Having the site header text (Watts Up With That?) separate from the site header picture and menu (the big earth picture) looks quite weird.
( Could be because I’m using Firefox 3.6.3?, but it looks broken in Chrome as well )
The line spacing in the articles and comments is huge, needs to be half of what it is.
There is no clear definition on the home page between separate articles.
(either the article headers need to be a more contrasted colour, or a line between articles would be nice)
The padding around the site content (gap between text and edge of white space) could be a lot less. (let the text use more area?)
Lastly, the text for the “leave a reply” area needs to be a darker grey, could get eye strain reading it lol.

David Ball
April 27, 2010 6:03 pm

I posted this on the wrong thread. Should be on this one. Is it possible to do a thread on the new photo at the top of the page? I am curious for many reasons. Please and thank you.

Deb
April 27, 2010 6:04 pm

I have IE6 with a screen resolution of 1024×768 at work and it looks like crap – but it’s not like I can update my browser on a corporate system. At home I use Firefox 3.5 at 1280×1024 and it looks fantastic. I didn’t comment while at work because I had a feeling that I wasn’t seeing the true theme and I was right! The IE6 version doesn’t have the nice grey bars or shading down the side and the sidebar links are way down at the bottom beneath the posts. It looks downright amateurish, and yeah. A train wreck.
I say go with the change. People will eventually upgrade…

Roger Knights
April 27, 2010 6:06 pm

I like the wider columns.
Testing here for automatic line-spacing.

Luke says:
April 27, 2010 at 2:33 pm
The white background is pretty hard on my eyes.

I agree. I wish

TomRude
April 27, 2010 6:13 pm

Fonts work fine now! looks great.

pwl
April 27, 2010 6:20 pm

Nice new style.
The text of your by-line in your graphic heading is spaced to close making it harder to read.
I’d suggest not scrunching it in so much. Use more of the margin space or trim some verbiage or put it on two lines, and make the font larger. No point in people having to strain their vision reading fine point text. Maybe lose the bold depending on the other adjustments.
How do I embed videos or photos in the comments like some people are able to do? REPLY: You can’t without admin priviledges

Myron Mesecke
April 27, 2010 6:21 pm

I can’t afford to buy new everything right now. With the computer I have and the browsers I can run on it the new design isn’t coming out readable. It was great while it lasted. I guess this is one site I will have to write off.
REPLY: well you seem to be able to post comments. Try Google Chrome

PeterE
April 27, 2010 6:32 pm

I really like the new theme. I run 1900×1200 at home and it looks fantastic! However, like others have posted, I would like to see a divider between posts on the main page (e.g., a literal dividing line like in the comments section or a full block background color such as light grey for each post). Otherwise, it looks good!

April 27, 2010 6:36 pm

As a blogger, like you Anthony, I believe the update is FANTASTIC!
I use Google’s Chrome and your site looks great. Thank you for the work you do and if only 13% (on the poll) aren’t happy with this update, SO BE IT! 🙂
Again, appreciate what you do and keep up the wonderful work.

Editor
April 27, 2010 6:39 pm

Disaster at home. I’m running an old SUSE 10.1 and really ancient Firefox 2.0.0.5. I see the header image and a big white background taking up nearly the whole window. The scroll bar lets me pull in a second half, and that’s where the text. I had the same problem with mlb.com last year, but they changed something this year they’re okay again. I can’t upgrade Firefox without upgrading a slew of other stuff, and the SUSE update site went away ages ago.
This system has so much stuff going on (Apache, MySQL, Vantage Pro logging stuff) that about the only way I’m comfortable with upgrading Firefox is to build a new system, and I don’t have time for that any time soon. So I’ll spend time learning about CSS, maybe there’s a bug or something I can disable with http://chrispederick.com/work/web-developer/ or look at other browsers or use a PC, or something or other.
One bright point – the text area has a gray background, much easier on the eyes for the most part!
REPLY: Or just buy a used PC from Geeks.com with Linux/Windows preloaded. Firefox 2.0? Sheesh. Sorry I got no sympathy for not keeping upgraded. -A

Roger Knights
April 27, 2010 6:40 pm

I like the bullets in front of each “recent post” (shouldn’t that be “… thread”, BTW?). Now I can tell where one ends and the next begins.

Roger Knights
April 27, 2010 6:41 pm

PS: I wish the list of recent posts were right underneath the search box, so I could see what’s new instantly by going to the top of the thread.

Dave Wendt
April 27, 2010 6:50 pm

How do I embed videos or photos in the comments like some people are able to do? REPLY: You can’t without admin priviledges
Is that a change with the new format, I’ve gotten YouTube videos into comments in the past?
REPLY: just put in the Youtube URL, but you cna only put links to images as a URL not embed it -A

John A
April 27, 2010 6:51 pm

I like the new look. It’s crisp, clean and professional.

Pamela Gray
April 27, 2010 7:02 pm

Thank you Anthony! I am an early riser but my dry eyes don’t work so well at 5:00 AM. The enlarged font is a godsend. Especially since I think, apparently, I have been posting on a site called WASP. No wonder I have been getting inquiries as to exactly when I was a WASP. My focus on weather didn’t seem to be much different from all the other posts, since women pilots are as interested in weather as Anthony is. Who knew?!?!?!?!?

Editor
April 27, 2010 7:04 pm

E.M.Smith says:
April 27, 2010 at 10:50 am

Does this theme still handle a preformatted table such that it puts a scroll bar on it and lets the lines be quite long but you can scroll over to see them, or does it truncate like some others?
Looks like wide tables will truncate right…

Let me try. First with <pre>:

Does this theme still handle a preformatted table such that it puts a scroll bar on it and lets the lines be quite long but you can scroll over to see them, or does it truncate like some others?

And with <code>:
Does this theme still handle a preformatted table such that it puts a scroll bar on it and lets the lines be quite long but you can scroll over to see them, or does it truncate like some others?

April 27, 2010 7:31 pm

Anthony, any chance of a comment preview with comment formatting buttons?
REPLY: No, no, and no. As mentioned like zillion times here and in the article itself, wordpress.com does not support it. I’d have to move to a private server, and as we’ve seen with Climate Audit, when news breaks, so do single box servers. – A
Reply: I have installed greasemonkey and the CA assist plug in and I get comment previews and formatting buttons ~ ctm.

Nick
April 27, 2010 7:38 pm

I like the design, but for the top banner I’d suggest removing the italics on the tagline, make the font white, and use a font that will make the tagline text as clear as the links below it.
Nice work refreshing the blog. My experience with redesigns is that in 1.5 weeks, everybody forgets how it used to look.

Kevin_S
April 27, 2010 7:43 pm

I didn’t vote, I still haven’t made up my mind on the layout. But the larger text, my eyes thank you.

April 27, 2010 7:43 pm

Myron, you can now get an E-Machine netbook from BestBuy for $229

a dood
April 27, 2010 7:44 pm

The ‘Commentary on puzzling things” lone up top looks kinda cheesy… the type itself, I mean. The earth photo looks good.

Kevin_S
April 27, 2010 7:48 pm

If this double posts, my apologies, but my first attempt was just spinning its wheels.
I didn’t vote because I haven’t made up my mind on the layout. Now, for the text, my eyes like.

Frank Schroeder
April 27, 2010 7:52 pm

increased page width is good.
new layout has too much white though – try to increase density by reducing line height, font size, spacings.
fs

Bob Buchanan
April 27, 2010 7:59 pm

Looks great. Easier to read. Looks much cleaner.

Warren Stannard
April 27, 2010 8:05 pm

Sorry, it doesn’t work on my computer (iMac using Firefox 2.0020). Was a great site.. please fix!!! (The comments come out in the sidebar, so I was able to scroll down and post this comment, others with same problem may not perservere so you wouldn’t know) cheers Warren
REPLY: Firefox 2.0 is ancient, which is likely the problem, why not upgrade?-A

Frank Perdicaro
April 27, 2010 8:09 pm

Finally you are fixing the included smiling face at the bottom of the old theme!
That is good.
OTOH, it is too bright, and the information density is too low.
The banner image at the top needs a rework. It looks like you rasterized a purple
font at 40 dpi on top of a higher resolution image. With the new drawing size,
the rasterization is wrong. The low-contrast smoothing effect now looks wrong
on the black background.

Tom T
April 27, 2010 8:29 pm

I like the larger fonts. I found it hard to read the older one. It would be nice to be able to select a comment and reply to it.

Duke C.
April 27, 2010 8:38 pm

Wow. Don’t need these 3x reading glasses. Think I’ll drop back down to 250

wayne
April 27, 2010 8:43 pm

A couple of things I don’t like with this new format, it’s not as easy to use:
— Your own comment is not shown after you press submit. This forces you to keep a seperate copy so you can refer to the information within your own recent comment if and when needed.
— There is nothing, color or underline, to differentiate between normal type and an embedded link when you go to the trouble to wrap one in an A tag without hovering over it. Someone would never know it is there unless you place words to point that out.
— And your name and email doesn’t seem to be persistent anymore. Have to type it in each comment, or am I missing something.

Anu
April 27, 2010 8:53 pm

I don’t know; I’m skeptical.

April 27, 2010 9:07 pm

Ric Werme: Thank you for also trying to use a version of SuSE Linux way past its use-by date. 🙂 I’m running 8.2 on a back-end server, but not my regular desktop system.
Have you tried downloading the latest Firefox (now 3.6) from http://www.mozilla.com and installing it, without that woefully-slow version of YaST in the way? Or get the latest Opera from http://www.opera.com for your libc version.

Gary
April 27, 2010 9:40 pm

Change is always difficult to appreciate at first (unless it is really, really good). With that being said, I don’t think I like this. Seems to be too elementary (school, that is) and way too bright. Oh well, I need to start cutting down by internet time anyway.
REPLY: The “it is too bright” complaint is quite puzzling, since the body text background color is the same on both the old and new theme is identical RGB values of 255,255,255 i.e. pure white – A

brc
April 27, 2010 9:46 pm

I vote for the home page link to return. It was the quickest way to get back to the list of the latest summaries.
REPLY: I have no control over the theme contents on wordpress.com, but I have made the suggestion to the authors and I’m not the only one to have made that suggestion.
You can click on the words “Watts Up With That” and that takes you to the home page – A

Gaey
April 27, 2010 9:55 pm

As you said, we must like it or leave. So why have a poll? Don’t get too full of yourself there buddy. You will start going bald and end up looking like that Romm dude.

Gary
April 27, 2010 10:03 pm

REPLY: Firefox 2.0 is ancient, which is likely the problem, why not upgrade?-A
I don’t like that attitude. My cell phone company told me that once, said I had to buy a new phone because mine was three years old. Just keep buying a new thing whether you want it or not or can afford it or not. I say piss on you all that believe that is the right way to do business. This is one of many of the attitudes that is driving the global warming hysteria.
Reply: Interesting logical leap to global warming hysteria, but seriously, legacy support is an issue about which every technology provider has to make judgment calls. Is it worth compromising the experience for 95% of your audience because of the intransigence of a few? It is always a judgment call when to pull the plug on a legacy support issue, not an “attitude”. ~ ctm

kadaka (KD Knoebel)
April 27, 2010 10:39 pm

ErnieK says:
April 27, 2010 at 3:52 pm
Mr. Pete’s CA-assistant no longer works within the comment section (Preview and comment tools still seem to work though).
REPLY: It was never intended to work here, I never offered support for it. -A

It looks like someone else intended it to work here. Right-click the Greasemonkey logo, click on “Manage User Scripts,” and be introduced by CA-A to the “Open Science webring” where WUWT is an included site.
Which in no way changes that Mr. Watts has no responsibility concerning CA Assistant whatsoever, just be glad it works here at all. Functionally the only things lost are the optional age-based coloring of the names, which was of limited value, and the hiding of the oldest comments, which was likewise. The new system of links to specific comments with the time/date stamps actually seems more usable than the old “Reply with” function, which always worked buggy for me.
If Mr. Pete decides to, he may rework his CA-Assistant script to again fully work on WUWT. Although I would rather hope this inspires him to make something that works for a WordPress site in general, as opposed to how the current version is apparently expecting certain things with a certain theme to properly work.

Peter Czerna
April 27, 2010 10:45 pm

WUWT has looked the same for about 3 years, so I’m giving it a makeover.
Wrong reason.
I’m with Gary 9:40. A severe case of scroller’s finger tells me that the new design is not an improvement, either. The extensive spacing is mannered, the ‘says’ after the commentor’s name precious and the verbose datestamp parochial.
It’s also disappointing that you haven’t chosen a design that allows the user to scale the font with the text size option.

REPLY:
No reason to be disappointed. Simply use CTRL+ Mouse Wheel or or CTRL++/CTRL– to scale the font. Works great unless you are running an ancient browser that doesn’t support it. As for the others, I’m a veteran of TV news, and I run this blog much like a TV station. 3 years is a long time in TV to have the same graphics and layout, and I believe the same for a blog too. There’s other reasons for using this new theme too, which will become clearer with the WordPress 3.0 upgrade coming in May. -Anthony

Editor
April 27, 2010 10:52 pm

REPLY: Or just buy a used PC from Geeks.com with Linux/Windows preloaded. Firefox 2.0? Sheesh. Sorry I got no sympathy for not keeping upgraded. -A

I wasn’t asking for sympathy! (In earlier posts I did ask for a dimmer
background and a better hint list of HTML tags.)
I did figure out the key parts, not surprisingly they’re not practical for me to do unless I write some sort of filter, which I might do to highlight my favorite commenters.
At any rate, the two wide-column format seems due to this in style.css:
#main{overflow:hidden;padding:40px 0 0 0;}
I disabled it by changing main to mainxx and my decrepit Firefox
displays things as you intended. I’m not certain what the CSS code
means, so no promises may change will work elsewhere.
The too-bright background is due to
#wrapper{background:#fff;padding:0 20px;}
Changing #fff to #ccc (light gray) or #bcd (pastal blue) looks good to me.
The text is dark gray due to
#content textarea{color:#444;font-size:16px;line-height:24px;}
Using #222 (darker gray) or #000 (black) looks better to me.
REPLY: The “too light background” was exactly the same on the old blog theme: 255, 255, 255 or fff. -A

Peter Czerna
April 27, 2010 10:54 pm

Some readers say they can’t see links on the right side. They are there, try the horizontal scrollbar or set your monitor to a higher resolution.
There is no more information on the page than there was before. Why do we now have to scroll sideways or adjust our resolution to view this website?
As it happens, I do have a wide hi-res monitor. In my work I need to have multiple windows open, so I am not very happy about WUWT now taking up two-thirds of the monitor. Bad.
REPLY:There’s another simple solution, no grouching needed. Use CTRL+ mousewheel or CTRL++/CTRL– to change the size of the blog and text – A

kadaka (KD Knoebel)
April 27, 2010 11:03 pm

Son of a beast! There’s an auto-correct function working!
I just posted a comment where I used “Wordpress” (lower case p), and in the “awaiting moderation” view it was changed to the “official” “WordPress” with a capital P. I ctrl-a ctrl-c (copy to Notepad) my comments before posting, thus I am certain I used the lower-case as that’s what was copied. Yet that wasn’t good enough for WordPress so it got changed by WordPress. How rude!
Is there anything in the WordPress TOS that says to all users (mere commentators included) “Thou shalt properly capitalize the name of WordPress lest it shall be done for thee”?
Testing:
repeating lower-case p: WordPress
all lower-case: wordpress
w lower-case, p upper-case: wordPress

Gary
April 27, 2010 11:07 pm

Is it worth compromising the experience for 95% of your audience because of the intransigence of a few? It is always a judgment call when to pull the plug on a legacy support issue, not an “attitude”. ~ ctm
The Warmers/Socialists think the same way Charles. The skeptics are the “intransigence of a few” to them. They know exactly what is right for you and for me. And if you don’t agree it is because you just don’t know what is right yet. Think about it.

Editor
April 27, 2010 11:13 pm

Bernd Felsche says:
April 27, 2010 at 9:07 pm

Ric Werme: Thank you for also trying to use a version of SuSE Linux way past its use-by date. 🙂 I’m running 8.2 on a back-end server, but not my regular desktop system.
Have you tried downloading the latest Firefox (now 3.6) from http://www.mozilla.com and installing it, without that woefully-slow version of YaST in the way? Or get the latest Opera from http://www.opera.com for your libc version.

I’m kind of warming up to the idea of a virtualized Linux system at home, but I have enough interconnected things (e.g. Python, my weather station software, and MySQL), that a piecemeal upgrade is as frustrating an idea as a fresh install.
It’s been over a year since I tried upgrading Firefox, I forget what it wanted upgraded, but it was clear that by the time I did those and all their dependencies that I should stick with what was working as long as it works. I got sufficiently burned once when I upgraded Python and most of RedHat’s printer utilities stopped working. YouTube now displays a nasty message about my Firefox too. Maybe in November I’ll have time….
Opera is a possibility, the Konqueror on the system seems to work, but there are a couple Firefox plugins that are nice (“It’s All Text” to kick editing to emacs and Flashblock are the two main ones).
I could also see setting up a new system as a test system that can be shutdown for days at a time or reinstalled with the distro du jour and leave the old system as a file and app server.

Peter Czerna
April 27, 2010 11:19 pm

Thanks for your response, Anthony.
It’s probably just the shock of the new – my wife thinks the new theme is a great improvement, so this is the opinion I now hold…
BTW: I’m using IE8. Ctrl+mousewheel doesn’t scale the font, it zooms the page (often with horrible consequences). It is just a pity that popular blog software doesn’t pay more attention to accessibility issues.
REPLY: I just opened IE8 and found it worked quite well at scaling the blog with no consequences. Odd that it would be problematic for you. I have IE8 FF3.6, Safari, Opera, and Chrome all loaded on my system, and all seem to work well. Baffling -A

Admin
April 27, 2010 11:30 pm

Preview test
Preview test
Preview test
Preview test

Admin
April 27, 2010 11:32 pm

Ok guys, go install the CA assistant and greasemonkey.
http://climateaudit.org/ca-assistant/
This gives you full previews and formatting buttons.
Update Make that some preview and edit functions. Not all work ~ ctm

Cold Englishman
April 27, 2010 11:52 pm

If it aint broke, why fix it? Some say easier on the eye, but not if you have low vision, e.g. Macular Degeneration

tokyoboy
April 28, 2010 12:11 am

For me the new version is not printer-friendly………..

kadaka (KD Knoebel)
April 28, 2010 12:16 am

Re: charles the moderator on April 27, 2010 at 11:30 pm
Reloaded CA-A, still don’t get the age-based coloring…
And will the sub- and superscript finally work, for someone not signed in as an administrator?
Sub: Preview test
Super: Preview test
Reply: I don’t get aged based coloring either on this site, but the formatting buttons do not appear to be a function of my admin status. I will try again logged out. ~ ctm

logged out ctm
April 28, 2010 12:25 am

Bold Preview
Italic Preview
Superscript
Subscript
Hmmm…there may be something to this admin function and formatting. Must test more.

logged out ctm
April 28, 2010 12:30 am

Test superscript
Test subscript
Reply: Very interesting, not all formatting works for non admins. I will report this to John A, but I don’t think there will be much he can do about it. I think it’s a security feature.~ ctm

phlogiston
April 28, 2010 12:39 am

The new top world photo is nice, an improvement. Plus glad you lost the retro-seventies neon purple top text (“commentary on puzzling things…”).

Capn Jack
April 28, 2010 12:44 am

I dont mind it but are monitors still gonna do the odd bit of vasectomy.
he he, I know……………………………………….. snip.

kadaka (KD Knoebel)
April 28, 2010 12:51 am

Re: logged out ctm on April 28, 2010 at 12:30 am
Yup, I found that out long ago when I reported my “discovery” of CA-A working on WUWT in Tips & Notes, and while doing so found out that formatting which looks good in the Preview will only come through on posting if that particular site allows it. Thus sub- and superscript look very pretty on Preview at WUWT, however….
And I have just accepted I have no overriding reason to not be asleep right now. Good night!

April 28, 2010 12:53 am

CTM, thanks for the info but preview and such should be integrated into WordPress, Blogger has had it for ages, no excuse from WordPress IMO.

Tim James
April 28, 2010 12:56 am

Love it!
Very clean and readable. A huge improvement.

GeeJam
April 28, 2010 1:11 am

8/10. As a graphic designer, retain the nice 1.5 paragraph line spacing – but replace the serif typeface with an easier to read font. I’m sure that well over 50% of all those posted comments from our ‘science’ audience will appreciate the text change.
Suggest Futura, Myriad, Optane or Phinster – all cleaner, crisper and very easy to read. I can e.mail you the font files if you need them.
Hope this helps. PS. Like many, WUWT is now my home page, not just a ‘favourite’ anymore.

Kevin McGrane
April 28, 2010 1:30 am

New format doesn’t work with pre-Windows XP operating systems running Firefox. This might not trouble most people but will cause difficulties for those who are not so well-heeled, the elderly, and those in the third world who are still nursing their PCs and haven’t the expertise or the wherewithal to upgrade their hardware and software.

Robert Holland
April 28, 2010 2:39 am

seems to load a bit slower than previous format. But ok for me
Anthony : we sm to have become a bit more political in the last few months, lets get back to the sciences, havnt had much on solar of late, or on ARGO results, etcetc.

Spector
April 28, 2010 3:27 am

RE: Sadly, no I still can’t offer an edit feature. wordpress.com hosting doesn’t support it.
I note elsewhere, (in Policy) there is a mention that defective posts can be refreshed if they are brand new — is this really possible?

MartinGAtkins
April 28, 2010 4:04 am

Test Linux, Firefox, Greasemonkey.
Looks cool.

MartinGAtkins
April 28, 2010 4:09 am

Test2 Linux, Firefox, Greasemonkey.

April 28, 2010 4:16 am

BTW so WordPress does not allow plugins with their hosting? I am just surprised that they do not.
REPLY: They deem it a security risk.

MartinGAtkins
April 28, 2010 4:36 am

The first two tests were for direct graphic image. It doesn’t work and I think this is a good thing. It would be wide open to abuse. This is just a test of embedded link which should be ok and preview works fine. A nice improvement and thank you for the work you do, Never in the field of human conflict was so much owed by so many to so few.
Link

April 28, 2010 5:15 am

Anthony
With the new theme, might a new focus be on new topics as well?
In reviewing the past Icelandic volcano eruption situation, it seemed to me that with the entire past world focus was on manmade greenhouse gases only and we seemed to have taken our eye off other natural planetary cycles and potential risks which are far more consequential and immediate. [black swans?]
Some new major subtopics could be:
VULCANISM [all locations and not just Iceland],
EARTHQUAKES,
UPCOMING GLOBAL COOLING,
POSSIBLE IMPACT OF EARTH PASSING THROUGH A TAIL OF A COMET ,
INLAND MAJOR STORMS.[as opposed to hurricanes ]
Major risks in these areas are far more likely than global warming
I feel that the Kamchtka Peninsula and Kurile Island area especially poses a real risk in the future as major eruptions are long overdue here.

April 28, 2010 5:25 am

Mr Watts,
They say – “seeing is believing”. Look at the screenshots below. Half of them are in 100% size, the other half of them in 80% (which I prefer and MUST use for ___fast reading___). The latter resemble what I have been seeing watching your former WWW layout.
http://pp.blast.pl/wuwt/new.www/ssw_04.png – 100%
http://pp.blast.pl/wuwt/new.www/ssw_01.png – 80%
http://pp.blast.pl/wuwt/new.www/ssw_03.png – 100%
http://pp.blast.pl/wuwt/new.www/ssw_02.png – 80%
http://pp.blast.pl/wuwt/new.www/ssw_05.png – 100%
http://pp.blast.pl/wuwt/new.www/ssw_06.png – 80%
The present layout looks like computer monitor screen being under magnifying glass.
And there is a lot of wasted space on your WWW.
It is badly conceived project. It is against good practice in WWW layout development.
And last but not least. It is YOUR blog, but created for US, isn’t it?
Best regards
REPLY: This theme I’m using, called Twenty Ten, is now the defacto standard default theme for WordPress. You can read about it here: http://en.blog.wordpress.com/2010/04/26/new-theme-twenty-ten/
I doubt seriously that given their manpower, millions of users, and mostly positive feedback that it could be called a “badly conceived project”.
Could it be better? Sure, like anything there’s always room for improvement and tweaking. Am I going to go back to the old theme given what the WordPress user feedback and my own poll shows? Not likely. I’ve tested this new theme at 1024×768 resolution and it works just fine. In your screencap http://pp.blast.pl/wuwt/new.www/ssw_04.png it would also be OK if you didn’t run a sidebar in Opera.
The www trend is to go to larger screen resolutions given that computer monitors and video cards now routinely support higher resolutions. The advent of HDTV is part of the reason for this. I’d be remiss by not moving forward to make the blog more readable at larger monitor resolutions. Many people had to magnify WUWT given their monitor resolution. Shall I ignore them in favor of older standards?
I don’t disagree with you that there is some wasted whitespace, and with the release of WordPress 3.0 in May I’m hoping for a better CSS editor than the lame-o version they have now which is user hostile. – Anthony

Editor
April 28, 2010 5:45 am

Ric Werme says:
April 27, 2010 at 10:52 pm

[Notes on CSS stuff that might be an improvement.]
REPLY: The “too light background” was exactly the same on the old blog theme: 255, 255, 255 or fff. -A

This may be one of those issues that’s an issue only because one person mentioned it. It could also be due to:

The wider white area and greater percentage of white space
The alternating background before – one comment with background #ffffff, the next with #f5f5f5, subtle, but noticable.
The gray text gives a bit of washed out feel.

I like the Times Roman serif font, but that could be an issue with lower resolution monitors.
I like the wide box for the website component of a comment since I can see the whole thing and sometimes change it meet the situation. Hmm, guess I better change it.

Pamela Gray
April 28, 2010 5:57 am

The smiley face is gone! WUWT? I loved that little bugger.
REPLY: It was linked to the old theme, some little inside humor from the developer of that theme that is not present in this one. But I may have a solution. Look carefully for it in the near future at the top/bottom of the page -A

Warren in Minnesota
April 28, 2010 6:11 am

There is too much white on the screen. The space between lines is too large, and the letters with this font seem too wide. The space between paragraphs and comments is too large. As I return to WUWT for more articles, my interest wanes and I stop reading. I find this new format to be unreadable.
REPLY: With the soon to be released version 3.0 of WordPress, I hope to have more control of the whitespace soon, which is now buried in a user hostile CSS system with a lame-o editor. I tried making some CSS tweaks yesterday with disastrous results. This current theme is the new default theme of wordpress, and is also the most feature rich.
http://2010dev.wordpress.com/
– Anthony

beng
April 28, 2010 6:12 am

Ouch! Not good.
REPLY: No pain no gain.

anna v
April 28, 2010 6:30 am

charles the moderator says:
April 27, 2010 at 11:32 pm
I say:
The preview panel is here but the color coding and the “Reply with link” link has disappeared.
It is very useful. Can you contact the author of the script to get it back? It exists in CA and Lucia’s.
I am testing the formating 🙂 too.

OkieSkeptic
April 28, 2010 6:46 am

In Firefox 2.0.0.20, did a “view” drop down then “page style” then “no style” (versus “basic page style”) and everything went to normal with a single page bright white background (versus previous 2 page with horizontal scroll bar/greyed text)and the regular size black small print (which I like). However the right sidebar is now at the bottom of the screen (which is okay).
Note that I only have to do this on this website so must be a small glitch in the style sheet.

Pamela Gray
April 28, 2010 6:48 am

I figured out the color change on the sidebar comment list. If I have read it (and of course that would include my own posts) it turns lilac! So I wasn’t lilacpinkflagged after all! Just snipped.

Cam
April 28, 2010 6:51 am

Anthony… I prefer the denser, info packed former version. Too much white space and scrolling and somehow the Article titles have less visual impact….maybe because they are spread out further across the page.
I am gonna keep reading even if you put it in six point type and I have to use a magnifying glass… this is a wonderful site and your work deserves some kind of medal! Nevertheless…you asked for honest feedback….

anna v
April 28, 2010 6:51 am

just lost a post while trying out the Preview buttons.Probably in junk.
for some reason the name and e-mail are not being retained in this format 🙁

anna v
April 28, 2010 6:54 am

Posts do not appear with “waiting for moderation”
is this the new norm?

April 28, 2010 7:02 am

Anthony,
Still looks good on the Blackberry.
John

Gordon Ford
April 28, 2010 7:09 am

Anthony
The light grey text is too light for these overly experienced eyes. Otherwise no complaints.

beng
April 28, 2010 7:21 am

I’ll be more helpful — I’m getting black text on a dark gray background (except in this reply box which is white). Very difficult to read.
And yes, I’ve downloaded and installed the CA assistant for Firefox, but it doesn’t change anything.

Myron Mesecke
April 28, 2010 7:34 am

Myron Mesecke says:
April 27, 2010 at 6:21 pm
I can’t afford to buy new everything right now. With the computer I have and the browsers I can run on it the new design isn’t coming out readable. It was great while it lasted. I guess this is one site I will have to write off.
REPLY: well you seem to be able to post comments. Try Google Chrome
Yes, I was able to post comments. But the page wasn’t displaying properly. Chrome won’t run on anything under OSX10.5. My old Mac can’t run anything above 10.2.8. Why do I still have an old computer? Wife in education and one kid going to college and they need the newer faster computers for education. I’m getting by with older because at home I only use a computer for personal use. One of the biggest complaints against the AWG crowd is their using the latest greatest computers instead of real science to try to prove their point. Newer isn’t always better when it leaves so many in the dark. (kind of like wind power)

April 28, 2010 7:42 am

I am not to picky about blok theme types.
But it is slightly annoying to have to scroll way, way down to get to your very useful links on the sidebar. If this one limitation can be overcome, then your new theme will be fine.
Tom

Retired Engineer
April 28, 2010 8:10 am

Bigger text. Better for us old geezers who don’t see as well.
But a huge delay while typing. I can get a word or two ahead of what appears on the screen. WUWT?

a dood
April 28, 2010 8:18 am

Looks good but yeah the default font size is a little big. I think it will be one of those sites that I click the ‘decrease font size’ button by force of habit when dropping in for a visit…

April 28, 2010 8:52 am

Mr Watts,
I give up, it’s futile, as I see now.
Let me only point you your words:
I doubt seriously that given their manpower, millions of users, and mostly positive feedback that it could be called a “badly conceived project”.
Do not be offended but do not use such arguments in discussion with me, please.
That way you could say that million AGW worshipers are RIGHT – simply due to their sheer number and “manpower”. 🙂
“WordPress project” doesn’t mean excellency, ever, especially in the case of WordPress.
You’ve made a step forward. OK. But let me show you good, equally “wide” websites:
http://www.infowars.com/
http://www.accuweather.com/blogs.asp
http://www.accuweather.com/blogs/anderson/
The three websites have the same 2 column layout in the same proportions as your WordPress.
Think over the AccuWeather example with its excellently balanced layout, toned down colors, emphasized different areas, smaller(!) graphics on the first (home) page, and equally balanced title and text fonts and their sizes – balm to my eyes (I’m 53 year old) to put it succinctly.
I hope WordPress 3.0 will be delivered with appropriate tools to conjure up such layouts.
Best regards

Nick
April 28, 2010 8:55 am

Anthony – you might be interested in viewing your site in a browser emulator to see how things look in different browsers. I’ve had success with:
http://spoon.net/browsers/ (note – must be opened through IE)
and
https://browserlab.adobe.com/

pettyfog
April 28, 2010 8:55 am

Worked fine for me. I never changed anything in font or display in the five years I’ve been using Firefox
Older FF works fine, Older user likes the larger font
Mozilla/5.0 (Windows; U; Windows NT 5.0; en-US; rv:1.9.1.9) Gecko/20100315 Firefox/3.5.9

Gail Combs
April 28, 2010 9:00 am

I like it. The larger type is easier on these old eyes and it is nice to have the HTML tags listed.

Steven K
April 28, 2010 9:01 am

http://wattsupwiththat.com/2010/04/27/new-theme-for-wuwt/#comment-378097
Thank you; you have no idea how much time and hassle you just saved for me!

April 28, 2010 9:32 am

No new gripes on this style.
Font size is better! Typeface is a bit “artful” with stuff like “3” being in the descender. Otherwise the combination of serif for blocks of text is good, with titles, etc sans-serif. Links, etc. on the side-bar could be sans-serif. That may be out of your control in catastrophic-style-sheets.
Long-standing gripes about waste of screen space on grey margins around the virtual b(l)og-roll of comments — the side-bar could be double the width; and lack of “where was I” marker.
I like the idea of being able to collapse older comments to reduce scroll-wheel milage; perhaps selectively expanding some; to cherry pick quotes. 🙂

john ratcliffe
April 28, 2010 9:40 am

I like the new format.
My laptop + XP + Firefox likes it too. Everything fits the screen and seems to work.
Like others, I found that the new screen too ‘bright’. For myself, I changed the background colour to a light blue and text to black, much kinder to my eyes.
In Firefox use “Tools>Options>Content>Colours”, and uncheck “use system colours”.
(Tom in Texas http://wattsupwiththat.com/2010/04/27/new-theme-for-wuwt/#comment-378174) Thanks for the tip!!
I come to this site for the excellent content and discussions. I would still come here for that reason even if I didn’t like the changes, but now for me with the larger font, it’s a nobrainer. Voted ‘Love it’.
BTW. The Google Ads seem to have fallen off, is that just on my set-up or general?
I used to hit the ads to give Anthony a tiny reward for providing this site.

Kay
April 28, 2010 9:48 am

I LOVE the new format! Much easier to read.

W. Urth
April 28, 2010 9:49 am

Looks great in Firefox 3 on Win XP. My ancient Mac at home (Beige G3 X.2.8 running Firefox 2, 1024×768 is a mess (no support for Firefox 3). There is nothing on the left hand side of the screen and I have to scroll all the way to the right to see any content.

OK S.
April 28, 2010 9:58 am

Everything looks good (both on Firefox 3.6.2 and I.E. 8.0) running on VISTA. On laptops mostly–1280 x 800 px. Haven’t projected it to a screen yet, so can’t say.
Font size and spacing are also good. I wouldn’t squeeze the lines together too much further.
Most of my readers found a serif font more readable than a non-serif font, too, so I would stick with Times New Roman or something akin for the body text–decorative text, whatever looks good to you.
OK S.

Colin from Mission B.C.
April 28, 2010 10:07 am

I like the new format. It’s not radically different, but just enough for a nice “refresh” of the site. I honestly can’t explain why, but I find the new format easier on my eyes as well. I do not appear to be experiencing any issues with browser compatibility. I’m running Firefox 3.6.3 on a Windows 7 machine.

Dave Worley
April 28, 2010 10:24 am

The bright white background does dry out my eyes after a while (contact lenses).
Otherwise, the new look is appealing.

ldd
April 28, 2010 10:42 am

Like it.
On a toshiba laptop here -few years old, windows XP, that’s ancient in the tech world no doubt, but all shows well on my screen.
Like the new look, much easier to read for those of us with some visual impairments, not necessary to increasing fonts every time I visit, thank you.
Love this site Anthony, thank you for doing what you’re doing – what our political leaders and the slavish to AGW-LSM won’t do – getting the truth out about this world wide ruse of AGW.

MartinGAtkins
April 28, 2010 10:50 am

I’ve just descovered another handy feature. Using firefox, if you right click the mouse on the date under the name of the poster you can use “Copy Link Location” and it creates a clipboard link to that message that can be posted anywere.
Willis Eschenbach

Pops
April 28, 2010 11:32 am

Just an idea. Try putting a dark, horizontal line (darker than the one between these comments) just below the posted in line of links at the bottom of each article on the main page. As it is, it’s a little too easy to scroll right passed the next headline. Apart from that, it’s looking good in Firefox 3.6.4 and with a 1024 * 768 screen resolution on my ageing 17″ monitor.

Mike M
April 28, 2010 11:34 am

I still have one computer running Windows 98 and my browser on it is Netscape 7.1. The prior format worked fine on it but this new WUWT format displays as a blank page, (all the source code loads with no errors; it’s just a blank display).
I’ve only run into this problem with one other site – breitbart.com (oddly, breitbart.tv works fine), so I suppose there might be a simple tweak to get it to display in Netscape?
From another angle, Michelle Malkin’s site is running WordPress. It looks better than WUWT’s prior format but works fine in Netscape for some reason.

kadaka (KD Knoebel)
April 28, 2010 11:36 am

From anna v on April 28, 2010 at 6:54 am:
Posts do not appear with “waiting for moderation”
is this the new norm?

It’s still the old norm when the filters grab a comment, as I have found when referring to a certain former German government by name. I’m not having a problem otherwise with “waiting” posts not showing.
From anna v on April 28, 2010 at 6:51 am:
just lost a post while trying out the Preview buttons.Probably in junk.
I’ve had a quirky “lost comment” when posting while using Preview, but it did show up later.
for some reason the name and e-mail are not being retained in this format 🙁
Could be a browser issue on your side, mine is retaining it just fine, even through the style change.
Come to think of it, you should delete your cookies, purge your cache, then reload WUWT. Name/email retention works when you browser realizes you are on the same site, and the site’s server shows you the “awaiting moderation” posts when it knows you are the poster of them, which it tracks with the browser. Between the browser and the site you could be getting mis-identified. This likely is a cookie issue, getting fresh new ones should fix it, purging the cache may also help and won’t hurt.

April 28, 2010 11:53 am

Mike M says @April 28, 2010 at 11:34 am:
I had the same issue with Breitbart coming up blank. The [temporary] fix that works for me is to click Command + to increase the screen size [Control +, I believe, on a PC].
Changing the screen size makes the page appear, don’t know why.

Girma
April 28, 2010 12:13 pm

Anthony
How about including a number ID to each post?
[WordPress does not support numbered posts. ~dbs, mod.]

regeya
April 28, 2010 12:22 pm

I’d make the headlines about 34% larger than the body copy; other than that, it looks good. 🙂

Ken
April 28, 2010 12:24 pm

How about a feature that lets me quickly reduce the size of the font, etc. to what it was before.
LARGER is NOT better!!!!
REPLY: Already built into your browser. Try CTRL+Mousewheel or keyboard CTRL++ / CTRL – –

Randy Westcott
April 28, 2010 12:30 pm

The larger typeface is fine, and easier to read, but there is way too much white space. Tighten the space between lines. I find myself looking for the next sentence or graph. The eye ought to flow there naturally.

kadaka (KD Knoebel)
April 28, 2010 12:35 pm

Girma says:
April 28, 2010 at 12:13 pm
Anthony
How about including a number ID to each post?
[WordPress does not support numbered posts. ~dbs, mod.]


Actually there is a hidden numbering system, the numbers don’t publicly display. With this theme, under the commentator’s name, the time/date stamp has a link with a comment number that goes right to that comment. Thus there is numbering.
But if you’re referring to a “1, 2, 3…” numbering scheme for the display of posts… Sorry, but that sounds way too boring for this site. 😉

John Galt
April 28, 2010 12:59 pm

You still have a link on the main menu named “Test”

Michael larkin
April 28, 2010 1:50 pm

I dislike this new theme even more than I did yesterday. I tried looking through some of the threads, but felt no urge to get involved and read on as I used to with the old theme. Seriously, Anthony, for me this is a big issue: I can no longer get my daily fix at WUWT because I can’t stand the layout. Too much white space, pale serifed text, general snow blindness.
Also, I never used to have to re-enter my name and email address every time I posted – is that something to do with the new theme?
Sorry to be negative, but you have asked for comments…

April 28, 2010 2:37 pm

Sorry Anthony. I know it must have been a lot of work changing your website which I read avidly every morning but I find it MUCH harder to read. The print seems to be paler and the lines longer. There also seems to be less writing before one has to click the link to read more, which is annoying if I am in a hurry. The sidebar is smaller and harder to read also. I wish you would revert to your old format – I think you will lose readers with this one. It is MUCH harder to concentrate on.

Pascvaks
April 28, 2010 2:44 pm

Can’t seem to keep my “Name” and “Email” in the “Leave a Reply” boxes. Must reenter these for each comment now. Prehistoric IE6 software. (Not a big problem, I can read and comment; your change looks great.)

Number8Dave
April 28, 2010 3:42 pm

Looks fine on our regular computer, but my wife just kicked me off on to our old backup computer (while she does some actual work) running Firefox 2.0 on Windows 98, and the formatting is completely shot. I guess it’s time to upgrade, but it displays most sites just fine.

jaymam
April 28, 2010 4:11 pm

The new theme looks fine using Opera 9.25 so I guess I’ll have to use Opera instead of my preferred Firefox. It’s almost unreadable using Firefox 2, and it crashes my machine using IE6. I’m able to look at most other sites just fine on all three browsers.
I cannot get any other browsers for Win98SE, and newer versions of Windows are too bloated to run on this machine, which I hope to be running Linux on when I get the time. If I hadn’t spent 5 months looking at Climategate I’d be on Linux by now!
REPLY: I don’t know why anyone would want to still use Firefox 2, which is ancient. Double Ditto for Win98 SE. Sorry, not always possible to support the computing era of 12 years ago and move forward at the same time.
BTW Ubuntu offers a way to install and run dual boot with Windows, and has a Firefox 3.6 ready to go -A

April 28, 2010 6:45 pm

As I mentioned before, behind a websense wall, I only get black on gray. I found out today that I can’t post at all now from work, not that I did much anyway.
Any content at wattsupwiththat.wordpress.com is blocked (which is why I couldn’t see most of the pictures before either. Any content at wattsupwiththat.com is open.
So if it’s just as easy to post content at wattsupwiththat.com instead of on wordpress, I can see it.
This is what I was going to post: http://www.cnsnews.com/news/article/64827
I guess it was only a matter of time, global warming can cause cancer, mental disorders. I thought global warming REQUIRED a mental disorder. Huh.
Thanks!

Clint
April 28, 2010 7:29 pm

I see I’m not alone: Too much white space. More than you had is a good thing–the old layout did feel rather cramped–but this is too far the other way. I’d lose the 20px borders to the left and right of the header image. I’m with those who like the post text in sans serif, too. Easier to read and, frankly, sets you apart more. The serif text makes your blog look too much like everyone else’s. Also, while I’m making requests, boost the post titles up another four points or so. They’re not set off enough at the current size, IMO, even in bold.
My three cents!
Clint

Richard Percifield
April 28, 2010 7:36 pm

My only suggestion is that it is difficult to know what are posts and what are adverts. Maybe a larger, bolder or definitive font would help. I can navigate it, but a better use of the white space would help.

jamie
April 29, 2010 2:33 am

Looks rubbish in IE6, but then again, what doesn’t? Unfortunately I have to use this horrible old browser in work. Not my choice!

wayne
April 29, 2010 3:29 am

Anthony, I know you must have put much work getting this new format up and running but after a few days of reading I am starting to agree with many which comment that this is MUCH harder to read day by day. I don’t know if it is just the font but seems to be the grayness of the type also. Your other font was MUCH easier on the eyes. I’m afraid this might keep some for reading so frequently.
The excess whitespace is just style, it looks more “ad agency” savy which is good but you could lose some small amounts of vertical space here and there without ruining the sytle.
Why do you have to retype your name and email every comment? That’s a hassle.
Why does your own comment disappear after submitting? Will those be fixed later?

Was looking at your CSS and the font will not let you size it because the size is stated in pixels high instead of using smallest, small, …, large, largest relative sizes. You can zoom the whole page but you have to get the page so large to have easily readable type that other sites are unreadable without sizing back down. When you come back to WUWT you have to size back up. Another hassle. Making just the body paragraph text , not everything, releative sized would help. The bulk can remain fixed-sized.
Just thought you might consider these aspects. Something hard to read doesn’t get read as much, statistical fact.

anna v
April 29, 2010 3:34 am

I have disabled the Greasemonkey choice. Lets see if I get a “waiting for moderation” post.

kadaka (KD Knoebel)
April 29, 2010 3:52 am

Excuse me, I want to test something here.
For my previous post I combined italics with blockquote, which I did with the old theme, but somehow ended up with ordinary text.

This is blockquote with italics.

On another thread I just blockquoted something, and it automatically came up as italics.

This is the new normal blockquote.

So is this the new normal?

To get ordinary text in a blockquote, use italics.

WUWT?

anna v
April 29, 2010 4:02 am

my problems with this new format:
name and e-mail are not retained, even if preview and greasemonkey are disabled.
“waiting for moderating ” is not available, either. Post disappears and may appear after monitoring.
when greasmonkey is enabled, the preview works, but the color coding with time of posts and the “reply with link” do not.

anna v
April 29, 2010 4:04 am

test from explorer

Roger Knights
April 29, 2010 4:14 am

GeeJam says:
April 28, 2010 at 1:11 am
8/10. As a graphic designer, retain the nice 1.5 paragraph line spacing – but replace the serif typeface with an easier to read font. I’m sure that well over 50% of all those posted comments from our ‘science’ audience will appreciate the text change.
Suggest Futura, Myriad, Optane or Phinster – all cleaner, crisper and very easy to read. I can e.mail you the font files if you need them.

I agree. Times New Roman’s appeal was to newspaper publishers, because it packed in type more tightly than competitors on limited newspaper space.

Roger Knights
April 29, 2010 4:34 am

Another suggestion: Double the number of “Recent Posts” — It was set at the current dozen or so back in the days when threads were added much less frequently. New threads now get pushed out of sight too soon — usually within a week.

Simon
April 29, 2010 5:07 am

I like the new banner image, but i’m finding the text very hard to read – it’s too large, the typeface is too thin, and it needs to be sans serif to increase readability.
However, not the end of the world if it stays like this, i’ll just restyle it back to how it was before with Stylish!

kadaka (KD Knoebel)
April 29, 2010 5:15 am

anna v, did you try deleting the old cookies yet per my previous post to you?

Editor
April 29, 2010 5:22 am

GeeJam says:
April 28, 2010 at 1:11 am

8/10. As a graphic designer, retain the nice 1.5 paragraph line spacing – but replace the serif typeface with an easier to read font. I’m sure that well over 50% of all those posted comments from our ‘science’ audience will appreciate the text change.
Suggest Futura, Myriad, Optane or Phinster – all cleaner, crisper and very easy to read. I can e.mail you the font files if you need them.

I don’t know how special fonts work in HTML/CSS. If Anthony starts producing pages with a font that isn’t part of brower/system distributions, how will my browser get access to it? Is there a CSS option that specifies where to find the font? Will browsers cache it by URL/fontname so that other sites that use it get from the local cache?

Bob Layson
April 29, 2010 5:26 am

To an old hand the new look seems too smooth and corporate. Too much white space where there could be fact and argument. Newcomers will not feel the same I’m sure and will value the content as much as I still do.

Quantum
April 29, 2010 5:28 am

This is a disaster. WUWT is now totally hosed on my Acer Aspire Linux-based netbook running Firefox. Nothing displays except the banner and the rest is all white.
On my iMac there is way too much whitespace.
Simplicity works. Save the reader’s time.

Editor
April 29, 2010 5:42 am

anna v says:
April 29, 2010 at 4:02 am

name and e-mail are not retained, even if preview and greasemonkey are disabled.
“waiting for moderating ” is not available, either. Post disappears and may appear after monitoring.

That’s very odd – I have those problems with Konqueror. My last comment was through Konqueror. (Version 3.5.1 which has got to be ancient, I have no idea what the current rev is.)
I looked at the HTML source and saw the value=xxx pieces that should pre-fill those fields in the comment form.
I reloaded this page in my ancient Firefox, and not only are those fields prefilled, but I see my pending comment! Reload on Konqueror – no pending comment. My guess is that there’s something funky with cookies going on, but I’m not going to look any further until tonight.
What browser were you using where you don’t see the prefilled fields?
FWIW, I have greasemonkey installed but disabled. It loses text if you read another page and then go back, so I’m using “It’s All Text” that lets me use my preferred editor outside of the browser.

Robert Layson
April 29, 2010 5:44 am

A further test with variation.

anna v
April 29, 2010 6:14 am

kadaka (KD Knoebel) says:
April 29, 2010 at 5:15 am
anna v, did you try deleting the old cookies yet per my previous post to you?
Yes, faithfully.

anna v
April 29, 2010 6:21 am

Ric Werme says:
April 29, 2010 at 5:42 am
I am using Foxfire.
Explorer also does not give the “waiting for moderation” signal or retain the name and e-mail.

john ratcliffe
April 29, 2010 10:14 am

Just deleted cookies, testing to see if name and email fields remain after posting a comment.
john

April 29, 2010 10:15 am

For a home button, create a page with the title as given below. The content area should be blank.
Home
REPLY: But won’t that simply direct users to a blank page?

john ratcliffe
April 29, 2010 10:22 am

Fields still cleared after posting, so clearing out old cookies did not work.
Autofill feature on Google toolbar did the trick though, lazy me!!!
john

April 29, 2010 10:28 am

oh it turned into a link, the page title should be as given below. just replace # with Home#/a>
REPLY: OK I’ll give it a try in just a minute or two. Watch this space. -Anthony
REPLY2: WP doesn’t allow this # in the page permalink, it just directs to a page called “home”. The Twenty Ten theme really need a home button given their drop down menu system. I’ve sent several requests off to support on this and other issues, but not a peep. Thanks for the effort though. – Anthony

April 29, 2010 10:34 am

No it works. i am not able to post the actual code. it shows up wrong due to the HTML.
#a href=”http://wattsupwiththat.com/”$Code Jotter#/a$
Replace $ with > and # with <

REPLY:
Check your email, thanks – A

April 29, 2010 10:44 am

The code for Home page
[sourcecode language=”text” gutter=”false”]<a href="http://wattsupwiththat.com/">Home</a>%5B/sourcecode%5D
This will work, i tried commenting on my blog first 🙂
You can delete the mess i created in your comment section.
REPLY: I hardly consider your gracious help a mess. OK I’ll try this again as the page permalink right? -A
REPLY: Tried your “Home” link on your page, does the same as mine, points to a blank page called home. Might be browser sensitive? -A

Mike M
April 29, 2010 10:46 am

Smokey says: April 28, 2010 at 11:53 am
(re: Mike M says @April 28, 2010 at 11:34 am:)
I had the same issue with Breitbart coming up blank. The [temporary] fix that works for me is to click Command + to increase the screen size [Control +, I believe, on a PC]. Changing the screen size makes the page appear, don’t know why.

Thanks for the promising suggestion but alas, it doesn’t work.

REPLY: …. Double Ditto for Win98 SE. Sorry, not always possible to support the computing era of 12 years ago and move forward at the same time.

I’d submit to that notion if there was something here that looked like it couldn’t have have been done 12 years ago, (though I suspect it has more to do with the ease of authoring a page which is something we do not see..). But, as I already pointed out, Michelle Malkin’s site is WordPress and I can see it/use it just fine with Netscape 7.1 on my lone Win98 machine.

April 29, 2010 11:38 am

I’ve got it working 🙂
You’ll be amazed what we were missing. I’ve posted this trick on my post about the Twenty Ten theme, just scroll down for the tip.
http://codejotter.wordpress.com/2010/04/25/twenty-ten-new-default-theme-for-wordpress/

anna v
April 29, 2010 12:04 pm

once more, testing name and e-mail retention

anna vv
April 29, 2010 12:15 pm

john ratcliffe says:
April 29, 2010 at 10:22 am
Fields still cleared after posting, so clearing out old cookies did not work.
Autofill feature on Google toolbar did the trick though, lazy me!!!
john

How to I get a Google toolbar in Firefox?

john ratcliffe
April 29, 2010 12:48 pm

@anna v
click “tools>addons”, new page opens, type “google toolbar” in search box, Click “add to firefox ” button.
That should do it.
best of luck
john

Anne Gaides
April 29, 2010 6:16 pm

Hi Anthony,
You forgot that some of us are unable to get high-speed broadband! The loading has slowed down terribly – I think it is mainly the pictures.
Keep up the good work.
Cheers,
Anne

anna v
April 29, 2010 9:19 pm

john ratcliffe says:
April 29, 2010 at 12:48 pm
Thanks. But for my version (higher) of Firefox it is called a googlebar and it does not have an “autofill” option. 🙁 .

anna v
April 29, 2010 9:24 pm

one more test

kadaka (KD Knoebel)
April 29, 2010 11:40 pm

anna v, I know about that auto-fill setting. Now, I’m using Iceweasel which is the Debian version of Firefox (and there’s an interesting story behind that worth Googling) so my menu selections for accessing it won’t be the same as yours.
So I found this piece that says where it is by Googling for “firefox autofill setting”. That should help you find it.
I can’t see how a theme change here could have flipped that setting on your browser, although strange things do happen… Eh, it’s worth a shot to check if it is set on or not. Note also that setting will be found in the “History” section. For such a strange quirk affecting only some people… Maybe deleting your browsing history will help?

Keith Minto
April 30, 2010 12:38 am

I complained earlier that the script lacked contrast.
In Firefox, go to Tools-Options-Content-Colours, text should be the blackest black and background, white. Uncheck “Allow pages to choose their own colour……”
This increases the contrast and, to me, makes reading less fatiguing.

Keith Minto
April 30, 2010 12:56 am

Except that it screwed up my email appearance, back to the drawing board, I guess.

anna v
April 30, 2010 6:02 am

kadaka (KD Knoebel) says:
April 29, 2010 at 11:40 pm
Thanks, history and cookies cleared several times, but nothing seems to work.
The options on privacy do not set, they go back to “history”, instead of “custom”.
In one of the googled files I tried to post and the scrambled number was wrong and my feedback would not be allowed :(. There was a security updated on Firefox on April 4 and I wonder whether that is the problem ( version of F 3.6.3)

pyromancer76
April 30, 2010 7:42 am

Like the “old one” better — more information closer at hand (eye) — but then I tend to like tradition. Since I think WUWT is an amazing tradition, I am not so keen on change. Nevertheless, whatever you want is fine with me.

Keith Minto
April 30, 2010 6:24 pm

Anna v,
I use the same version of Firefox,I update as the newer version comes out and besides the problems described above, mine works fine. My FF home page has Google search box as default. If you go to WUWT, then Tools-Page info-Permissions and check all boxes. Security will tell you have many times,in total you have visited WUWT.!
If that does not help perhaps I can guide you as to the layout under ‘Tools’ that seems to work for me.
Keith.

Claude Culross
May 1, 2010 1:59 pm

This question and its answer are probably somewhere in the 429 comments: why am I not seeing about 25% of the visual images?

anna v
May 3, 2010 3:05 am

Keith Minto,
There is a wordpress blog by ChiefIO ( link in panel on the right)
which still keeps my name and e-mail in the form.
The only difference I see in the pageinfo is
in the general, under Name and Content
the information is repeated in a line
text/html; charset=UTF-8
which is gray for wattsupwiththat.
I cannot add it.
the rest are the same

May 4, 2010 9:33 am

Anything that is easier to read is better – function is what counts.
Much blog software is not nearly user friendly enough, and has functional defects. But you know the Internet – full of two-year-olds.
Thanks.

anna v
May 4, 2010 11:07 pm

Over at Lucia’s I retain my name and e-mail on the form now.
Her Pageinfo also has a line with the UTF etc in the panel.

anna v
May 9, 2010 10:11 am

I am fed up with losing posts because of forgetting the form does not hold 🙁 .
This is a retry of the advice Kadaka gave me of going to tools>privacy.
The custom setting would not be preserved, until I also checked the history and checked in the settings a few things.
Now it is set at custom, so maybe it will work .
keeping my fingers crossed
REPLY: The issue is still being worked on by WordPress.

anna v
May 9, 2010 10:12 am

HipHip etc.
It worked, and I am getting “waiting for moderation” too.
thanks

anna v
May 9, 2010 8:40 pm

Lost it overnight. 🙁
settings changed to only erase “browsing history”.

anna v
May 9, 2010 9:05 pm

Logged out, then logged in. my name and e-mail are retained.
What seems to be working is:
tools>options>privacy
“Firefox will “: chose “custom settings for history ”
“when using the location bar suggest” chose “nothing”
and have blanked all choices in “settings”

anna v
May 10, 2010 4:43 am

I hope my last on this.
I am back to the default privacy
and history and the name and e-mail are retained.
It looks as if a comb went through and untangled it!!!
On the other hand, pixies must have adjusted to the computer age.

May 26, 2010 8:41 am

Rockin artice, cheers! can someone tell me how to get the little avatars to show up in my comments section? thanx!