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Looking at a lot of web applications (websites/services/whatever) that have a 'streaming' component (typically this is a 'Social' app): Think: Facebook's 'Wall', Twitter 'Feed', LinkedIn's 'News Feed'.

They have a pretty similar characteristic: 'A notice of new items is added to the page (automatically assuming via a background Ajax call', but the new HTML representing the newest feed items isn't loaded to the page until the users click this update link.'

I guess I'm curious if this design decision is for any of the following reasons and if so: could anyone whom has worked on one of these types of apps explain the reasoning they found for doing it this way:

  1. User experience (updates for a large number of 'Facebook Friends' or 'Pages' or 'Tweets' would move too quickly for one to absorb and read with any real intent, so the page isn't refresh automatically.
  2. Client-side performance: fetching a simple 'count' of updates requires less bandwidth (less loadtime), less JS running to update the page for anyone whom has the site open, and thus a lighter weight feel on the client-side.
  3. Server-side performance: Fewer requests coming into the server to gather more information about recent updates (less outgoing bandwidth, more free cycles to be grabbing information for those whom do request it (by clicking the link). While I'm sure the owners of these websites aren't 'short on resources', if everyone whom had Twitter or Facebook open in the browser got a full-update fetched from the server every-time one was created I'm sure it would be a much more sig. drag on resources.
  4. They are actually trying to save resources (it takes a cup of coffee to perform a Google search (haha)) and sending a few bytes of data to the page representing the count of new updates is a lot lighter of a load on applications that are being used simultaneously on hundreds and thousands of browser windows (not to mention API requests).

I have a few more questions depending on the answer to this first question as well...so I'll probably add those here or ask another question!!

Thanks

P.S. This question got trolled off of the 'Web Applications' site -- so I brought my questions here where they're not to 'broad' or 'off-topic' (-8

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  • im interested in what others have to say...
    – Pablo
    Oct 5, 2011 at 3:23
  • @Pablo thanks! already people are nicer than the web-app board!!! Oct 5, 2011 at 3:30

1 Answer 1

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Until the recent UI changes to Facebook, they did auto-load new content. It was extremely frustrating from a user perspective, as you'd be reading through the list of your friend's posts and all of a sudden everything would shift and you'd have no idea where the post you were just reading went.

I'd imagine this is the main reason.

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  • so imagine these items are changing rather rapidly, like sales on a stock ticker or comment threading on 'Huffington Post' (they highlight the number). If the user wasn't trying to read everything that came across ... would it be a concern about the number of requests to the server (even if the users browser was constantly having the html re-written) Oct 5, 2011 at 3:31
  • guess you get the answer no one else chimed in and it's been about 2 weeks...! Thanks! I'll keep looking for more information... Oct 19, 2011 at 4:45

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