User blog comment:Lancer1289/Wikia's New Skin, the countdown begins/@comment-737801-20100929200652

Ok the staff finally got around to answering some of the tyrade of comments, and so far, nothing, nada, zip about any of the negative comments. Granted some of then didn't have appropiate language, i.e. something that would get you a talking to on this site, or banned in the case of some people.

However they did site a new blog that would be going up next week with what they did with all the comments. This tactic only appears to be making people, myself included, madder because they are dodging the questions that have been asked. The blog has over 900 comments on it in less that 24 hours, with it being provided by 224 users! I took out the three staff that have commented so far. The total staff comments, probably around 35 or so. The rest are almost all negative feedback. The staff dodged questions and answered the same question five or six times about Wikia acting up earlier today.

So bottom line, more PR nonsense with no real answeres given. Wikia staff members have dodged the 800+ negative comments and only succeeded in making users even madder by doing so. When that new blog does go up then I'll be sure to grab it, if no one does before me and maybe, jsut maybe we'll get some answers, however I'm not hopeful.

Oh and the answers about page limits, I believe Susan Taylor said it best: "One of the main benefits of fixed width is that it allows improved compatibility with many screen sizes and resolutions and it also means that everyone is designing all aspects of content for the same number of pixels. Designing for fixed width allows everyone to see all the elements of a wiki including customized design and customized content accurately. In Monaco the way these elements are viewed can vary widely from monitor to monitor and fixed width helps resolve that issue."

Well that is one question answered, and even though I don't like it that is what I was at least looking for. A reasonable serious answer, now only 700 more to go. Fell free to comment on the blog linked above.