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Bus Discussion => Bus Topics ( click here for quick start! ) => Topic started by: jatnip on April 09, 2006, 03:15:56 PM

Title: new board question
Post by: jatnip on April 09, 2006, 03:15:56 PM
When it says that a new post have been added to an existing one how can I tell which ones are new without going back and reading them all?   I know they are in order but can't seem to find were the new ones start.  Must be to simple.  Thanks Jim
Title: Re: new board question
Post by: plyonsMC9 on April 09, 2006, 04:16:48 PM
Quote from: jatnip on April 09, 2006, 03:15:56 PM
When it says that a new post have been added to an existing one how can I tell which ones are new without going back and reading them all?   I know they are in order but can't seem to find were the new ones start.  Must be to simple.  Thanks Jim

Hi Jim, and welcome to the board. 

The board does track which topics you have read, and whether there has been a new post to the topic since you last read it.  Messages within topics are stored in chronological order.  e.g., original post is first, and so on, with the most recent being the post furthest down the thread.  So, if there are 3 pages of posts to that topic, go to page 3 to see the most recent posts.

Not quite as easy to see whether you have read a particular post, within a particular topic.  Especially as there are a large number of posts displayed per page.  Thus the board can't really tell whether you are looking at a particular post on a particular page.  This is different from the old board, where you actually had to click on each message to read it.  On this board, you click on a page which may contain multiple messages.  Different. 

There are lots of ways to make your life easier on this topic. You can have email messages sent to notify you that there has been a post to a topic you are watching, you can have the posts sorted in reverse chronological order, e.g., newest posts first, you can make other selections such as show unread posts since last visit (top of main page), you can show  "new replies to your posts", etc...

Well, hope this gets you a little farther along!   :)

Best Regards, Phil
Title: Re: new board question
Post by: DrivingMissLazy on April 09, 2006, 04:45:55 PM
Quote from: plyonsMC9 on April 09, 2006, 04:16:48 PM
Quote from: jatnip on April 09, 2006, 03:15:56 PM
When it says that a new post have been added to an existing one how can I tell which ones are new without going back and reading them all?   I know they are in order but can't seem to find were the new ones start.  Must be to simple.  Thanks Jim

Hi Jim, and welcome to the board. 

The board does track which topics you have read, and whether there has been a new post to the topic since you last read it.  Messages within topics are stored in chronological order.  e.g., original post is first, and so on, with the most recent being the post furthest down the thread.  So, if there are 3 pages of posts to that topic, go to page 3 to see the most recent posts.

Not quite as easy to see whether you have read a particular post, within a particular topic.  Especially as there are a large number of posts displayed per page.  Thus the board can't really tell whether you are looking at a particular post on a particular page.  This is different from the old board, where you actually had to click on each message to read it.  On this board, you click on a page which may contain multiple messages.  Different. 

There are lots of ways to make your life easier on this topic. You can have email messages sent to notify you that there has been a post to a topic you are watching, you can have the posts sorted in reverse chronological order, e.g., newest posts first, you can make other selections such as show unread posts since last visit (top of main page), you can show  "new replies to your posts", etc...

Well, hope this gets you a little farther along!   :)

Best Regards, Phil

My experience so far is that I have found it more convenient to have the messages in each post sorted so that the newest is on top, or the first. If there have been a few responses then I have to scroll down to see where the last message is I have read, but this method prevents me from having to go to the very last post.
Just my preference. Yours may vary.
Richard