There are some things that I miss right now in the commenting experience:
I want to open or expand the discussions panel to the whole window: This way I can really focus on the discussions and the replies and not get distracted by the document.
I want the comment blocks to behave the same way as in the document: This way I can copy links to block comments and even create comment block ranges. This way I can also reply to comments with more context.
I want the mobile comment experience to be as smooth as possible: The current drawer does not work properly. It is very Janky. The mobile commenting experience should work perfect.
I want the comment box on mobile to work properly: Right now the comment box is laggy. Specially when dealing with links, embeds, inline embeds (mentions) and media. The current experience makes users not trust the editor.
I want the web commenting to not require a redirect: but I understand this is a technical limitation that we cannot resolve right now.
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Related:
Notes about how the document machine should work — the document editor lifecycle that the commenting interface depends on
Product Backlog — product opportunities derived from these UX pain points (Commenting UX Suite)
Slite inline comment UX — external inspiration for inline comment patterns
Coda inline comment UX — external inspiration for comment threading UX
Linear Inline Comments UX — external inspiration for contextual annotation patterns
Google Docs inline comment UX — external inspiration for margin-based annotation threads
Discussions Panel Is Confusing — existing UX pain point with the discussions panel thread tree, directly related to the "expand to full window" request
Killing the Web Redirect for Commenting — completed project that addresses point #5: enables on-the-fly key creation so users can comment on any Seed web site without leaving the page, eliminating the redirect
Mobile formatting toolbar — project directly addressing mobile editor pain points (#3 and #4): floating toolbar, janky drawer, broken slash menu, and keyboard handling issues
Remodeling the web — the broader thesis on why the web needs remodeling; the redirect-based commenting limitation (point #5 above) is a specific instance of the broken web patterns this post critiques
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