BBC web page design changed again a couple of days ago, since when I note:
1. A day's radio used to fill 3 pages of my PC display (at preferred 1600 x 900)
It now fills 5 pages, apparently because non-programming links are posted at
the top and the "Listen Now" button below each programme entry instead of alongside it.
2. The familiar "Listen Now" hot button survives. It used to call up a sound track
directly. Now "Listen Now" calls another page, devoted to the individual programme,
with its own "Listen Now" button.
3. At this writing (Tuesday 1.30 a.m. GMT) "On Air Now" reports Afternoon on 3
(scheduled for 2 p.m. GMT.)
I suppose the changes are oriented towards an audience that listens to radio
on cell phones with tiny screens, the programmers are not clever enough
(or considerate enough) to maintain design features suitable for PCs, or else
estimate the habits of Radio 3's audience are the same as any other audience's.
1. A day's radio used to fill 3 pages of my PC display (at preferred 1600 x 900)
It now fills 5 pages, apparently because non-programming links are posted at
the top and the "Listen Now" button below each programme entry instead of alongside it.
2. The familiar "Listen Now" hot button survives. It used to call up a sound track
directly. Now "Listen Now" calls another page, devoted to the individual programme,
with its own "Listen Now" button.
3. At this writing (Tuesday 1.30 a.m. GMT) "On Air Now" reports Afternoon on 3
(scheduled for 2 p.m. GMT.)
I suppose the changes are oriented towards an audience that listens to radio
on cell phones with tiny screens, the programmers are not clever enough
(or considerate enough) to maintain design features suitable for PCs, or else
estimate the habits of Radio 3's audience are the same as any other audience's.
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