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Gregory

What exactly is gained here by writing "last week" instead of the precise timestamp? It's not like there's a lack of space there either.

I see this UX mistake very often. It's maddening. GitHub is one of the worst offenders. Instagram is also guilty of this with its "3214 weeks ago".

7 comments
marius

@grishka to me it's slightly better UX to see human readable time intervals like that for relatively short periods of time. It's easier to reason about someone that was last online last week, than someone was seen on the 8th of Jan 2025. For intervals longer than a couple of months I'm ambivalent...

Gregory

@mariusor but the problem with that is that "last week" loses an entire week of precision. Such a timestamp provides no useful information. I can understand it with "X hours ago", but any units larger than an hour are meh because an unacceptable amount of precision is lost

marius

@grishka why do you need more precision for this thing though? Why does it matter if it's been 7 days ago, or 13?

I don’t exactly remember the rules I'm personally using for human readable dates but I think I have smth like 1,8 weeks... Which one might argue it's not much better... :D

Marcus Rohrmoser 🌻

Hi @grishka,
personally I like 'human readable', coarse times consisting of only 2 parts and a single granularity: a few digits (max 1 decimal) + unit. But I consider the full fine data down to the second as e.g. tooltip (html title attribute) mandatory.

It's a matter of taste. To decide, (I) always do (say: try) a #UX #test with a number of real people.

Braw β˜•πŸ³οΈβ€πŸŒˆ

@grishka I do like it though. For me getting sense of time with absolute dates can be a little tricky, and here it just says the thing happened past week, and provides ability to view the full date if necessary. I think it's actually great. Instagram example is not great, on the other hand. I think after a week it doesn't make much sense to have relative date, but where date is not important and UI is constrained, providing relative time is fine, but only AS LONG as there option to view date

Gregory

@brawaru to me these kinds of relative dates, even when they don't lose precision (which this one does), feel like analog clocks: you have to make effort and do math to read them. I tend to think about time in exact numbers.

I'm fine with "today"/"yesterday" instead of dates, and "X minutes ago" as long as it's less than 60.

Kaito

@grishka I remember slashdot.org having a setting for this many years ago. πŸ˜‹

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