@ivan Of course he is. we take the 10 most visited sites in the world on a similar topic and see that many things are the same. This is especially evident in online stores. Any deviation from usability significantly reduces the conversion rate. Users are accustomed to a certain pattern and will not use something that differs from generally accepted practices. You can build an atomobile with a steering wheel on the roof, but no one will buy it. But everyone is trying to come up with their own template, especially in federated social networks. And it turns out the most terrible designs in the world, uncomfortable and disgusting (akkoma). See how it is implemented in metafox, everything is simple and clear
demo.metafox.app/user

@volanar i'm not saying that design/UX patterns does not exist 馃槄 - i'm saying that there isn't a single guideline for where messages and notifications should be in social networks (or pls point me toward such specific guideline). Also I'd be careful to mix usability and conversion rate - they're 2 completely different things.

@ivan Of course he is. we take the 10 most visited sites in the world on a similar topic and see that many things are the same. This is especially evident in online stores. Any deviation from usability significantly reduces the conversion rate. Users are accustomed to a certain pattern and will not use something that differs from generally accepted practices. You can build an atomobile with a steering wheel on the roof, but no one will buy it. But everyone is trying to come up with their own template, especially in federated social networks. And it turns out the most terrible designs in the world, uncomfortable and disgusting (akkoma). See how it is implemented in metafox, everything is simple and clear
demo.metafox.app/user