Solution to source filter list size #3795
Replies: 3 comments 6 replies
-
Thank you for opening this discussion and collecting the conversation into a single place! We could also group the sources by "type": museums and cultural institutions, scientific collections (e.g., Science museum, iNaturalist, maybe Geograph photos), digital photo collections (a group that would include such sources as Flickr and RawPixel) and collapse them. This could be subjective, but as a user, I would probably like this categorization as it would give me some idea of the type of images I would get. The second idea seems prohibitively computationally expensive with the scale of our data. |
Beta Was this translation helpful? Give feedback.
-
Thanks for aggregating this discussion Sara! As an easy approach, I do really like the idea of conditionally aggregating and collapsing sources like the Smithsonian sources. Perhaps this could be a change we could make on the API end so that we could configure the groups using the Django Admin UI? |
Beta Was this translation helpful? Give feedback.
-
Synthesizing some points that were discussed in a team meeting a few weeks ago (2024-02-20), I think we came away with a few points:
I'll make issues for the first two points above with that in mind. |
Beta Was this translation helpful? Give feedback.
-
We've started this same discussion half a dozen times, and I can't find a single GitHub issue or the discussion I thought existed about it. This is a big problem with Smithsonian in particular, because the source names are long. The filters list is unusable.
In the screenshot above, Smithsonian sources take up almost the entire screen (not a small screen space!).
With Smithsonian, they are under a single heading, so it makes some sense to collapse them in a heirarchy, like a tree list. As in, we can easily communicate why those sources would be under that heading.
It is clear why these sources are grouped under Smithsonian.
This, on the other hand, is somewhat confusing information. None of these organisations are related to Flickr, they just use it as a source. Some of them are highly prestigious sources, that we would be remiss to collapse under a heading. The same is true of Europeana sources, but with the added complexitiy of the fact that those sources only have data provided by Europeana, and do not host their images there. The relationship is therefore even harder to guess, even if you do click through to the foreign landing URL of a work from that source.
In any case, we need some solution to this problem, because the current approach is untenable, and makes browsing the image sources a pain, especially if you are looking for a particular source, and have to scroll a lot to find it.
Some ideas that could work:
I like doing both of the first two, and then only the third one if for some reason those first two weren't sufficient. Of course, any heirarchy of sources makes sorting them by available results much tricker! Especially with the third option. Might make sense, for example, to have Smithsonian sources all count towards the provider heading. That doesn't make any sense for Europeana and Flickr, though, for similar reasons to what I've shared above.
Anyway, just want to collect this conversation into a single place so we can finally make a decision and do something instead of starting and restarting this discussion another half dozen times without actually recording a decision.
Beta Was this translation helpful? Give feedback.
All reactions