Ifound a tutorial that helped me finally get the font sizing right - at least it almost did. I'm having to resize all my fonts to work on the mobile site. I was able to change my h3 font size with the following code in the screenshot below. Still following the tutorial to a tee, I tried changing the paragraph font size next. I have tried "p" and "p3" and neither change the size of the font (both of the fonts above and below "YOUR WEDDING VIDEOGRAPHER" are p3.
I have created a website for me brand consultancy (
rewildprojects.co) and I have an issue whereby when I scroll up or down on my mobile site, the text and fonts change size. Video for reference can be found here.
I've noticed this too. We just completed a new site with a 7.1 version and the headlines and body copy always jump (glitch) in sizes at the start of scrolling on mobile.
This reformats the text and makes it break at different points, so the glitch is sometimes even more drastic.
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Just like every other comment here, I've just started unfollowing any streamer that uses featured clips in order to remove this enormous waste of space at the top of the Live Feed tab. Twitch is not for old content to me, and it never will be. It feels bad to unfollow streamers that I enjoy watching and have followed for years, just so I don't have to have days old content shoved in my face, but that's what I'm going to keep doing until this goes away.
Assuming this topic is the "Recently Featured Clips" feature on mobile or otherwise, I agree 100% that this should be either removed or moved. My list of issues with this "feature":
1. I personally never go through a streamer's clips. I watch streamers for live gameplay, or watch their previous broadcasts. Not "clips".
2. When I open the app and click "Following", my first and primary objective is receiving a list of live streamers. My secondary objective would be a list of categories I follow. Dead last would be the "clips" a streamer or their chat has made. I have defaulted to unfollowing every streamer I have followed for years because of this feature, simply because its obstructive and sometimes "harmful." As an example, I had been avoiding any information about Baldur's Gate 3 in an effort to have a purely unhindered first playthrough. Turns out, the "recently featured clip" system hit me with a few spoilers because they're right in your **** face when opening the mobile app... Well f* me then.
3. If you're going to add a feature like this, you should at least allow it to be customized. Allow the consumer to toggle off the feature in the settings, choose a number of clips to show, or how long a clip should be visible to you. Some of the clips are 3+ days old, and I can tell you right now, while I don't care about clips in general, I definitely don't care about something that old.
4. If you're not going to let us toggle the feature through settings, at least put it in its own feature tab (as described by other consumers in other comments). This would allow you to have your obvious competition with tiktok or instagram stories or whatever while not ruining what was working perfectly fine in other areas of the app. We aren't following "clips", we're following streamers. Clips are *not* the primary form of viewing content on Twitch.
Every feature implemented needs an user end option to toggle it off.
The "featured clips" was implemented in such an obtuse way that I've just unfollowed the streamers that use it.
This is a streamer specific feature, so it needs to be in streamer specific context, ie. on the streamer's channel when visiting, or in a general site wide specific tab like the "Discover" or "Browse" tab.
Not on the following tab where it takes up a massive chunk of the screen (it's larger than the live channel thumbnails) and the opposite of what the following tab is for, live channel indication.
Agreed. This is a horrible change to the user experience. Too much real estate, clips with undesired content can't be removed, theres not even an option to move it to the bottom of the "Following" screen.
Does twitch even bother to test ideas like this with users before they make dramatic UI changes? "Featured Clips" is garbage.
Im on board with this. First of all, it is annoying to not be able to remove it. Second of all, I'm seeing things from a game that isnt out on console yet that I wish to keep in the dark about untill I can play the game myself.
Recently featured clips should not be at the top of the home screen when you first open up twitch. It takes up too much room and no one wants that to be the first thing they see. Either remove it, place it at the bottom, or add an option to turn it off
The Featured Clip only shows 1 clip on the mobile app. I see it everytime I login in and there is no way to remove it. Please have an option to remove the Featured Clip. What happens when it's extremely offensive to me or others? I literary have to see it everyday I open the app. The most popular clip may not be the most appropriate for all audiences, or may not be appropriate at all. Even though someone follows a streamer, they may not agree with everything they say or do. But to have the Featured Clip be something they disagree with, or take a offense to, and see it everytime they open the app without any way to remove it, may not be the best way to retain said viewer.
relocate that new clip thing "featured clips"?
i am on my follow list to see whos live streaming, not to watch clips
give those there own tab or something but please get them out of my list of live streams of people i follow
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The Lifesize mobile app makes it easy to start or join a meeting from anywhere using a supported Android or iOS mobile device. It is available for download from the Apple App Store and Google Play Store.
Note: Latest generally available versions of Android and iOS recommended. Available features, functionality, and performance may vary by the hardware model and OS version of your device. Devices that have been discontinued by the manufacturer may no longer be supported.
We pulled a report from the total impressions from the Google Ad Manager server, AdSense, Ad Exchange, and yield group partners in our network to find out what were the 10 most requested mobile ad sizes and ad formats for publishers in 2024.
This ad size is usually chosen automatically upon ad delivery on mobile devices. Advertisers can upload higher resolution video files, typically in the default formats like: 640480, 640360, or 19201080.
Sophisticated ad platforms, like Google Ad Manager, then transcode these video files into smaller versions to fit different devices, apps, and video players in the best way possible. Therefore, for mobile devices, the actual video size is 320180.
Also, remember that since we live in a mobile world and people use their phones to check their social media feed more than ever, vertical videos have a huge advantage, especially when it comes to Facebook ads.
Facebook recommends uploading the highest resolution source video available that meets the Facebook video ad size and ratio limits, without letter or pillar boxing. The video resolution should be at least 1280 x 720 pixels.
As you can see in the video requirements across ads placements, the Facebook feed video supports all aspect ratios from 9:16 to 16:9, so it all depends on your targeting and where your audience spends the most time.
The Facebook video thumbnail should have the same aspect ratio as your video and a high resolution, at least 1,280 by 720 pixels. If your video thumbnail has more than 20% text, you might experience reduced delivery in the video.
Below, you can see a great Facebook video ad example from Red Bull that promotes their annual Flugtag event, a competition where participants build their own flying machines. The video content with footage from the event is exciting and naturally engaging, so ads like this get great results.
The great news is that now you can also add video content to make your carousel come to life. This format allows you to showcase up to 10 images or videos, so you have more space to highlight different products, showcase specific details, or tell a story about your brand.
For this type of ad, the landing page link is required. The primary text can have up to 125 characters, and for each card, the headline can have up to 40 characters and the description up to 30 characters.
As you can see from this beautiful example from National Geographic, Instant Articles look beautiful, and they are suitable for extensive, premium content. That means your video ad will always be in good company and get noticed.
With this type of ad, the audience is already watching captivating video content, so it may be more receptive to your video ad. A creative video delivered at the right audience may have great results in terms of engagement and reach.
To test their performances, they ran a Facebook split test for their ad. The results showed that the campaign performed better when ads were shown in both Marketplace and News Feed, compared to News Feed alone.
This shows that the Newsfeed is the perfect place to generate demand while the Marketplace is a great place to fulfill that demand. So, if you get the chance, use both placements for your ads to maximize conversions.
Facebook Story ads are full-screen vertical ads that appear between Stories for up to 15 seconds, or until the viewer dismisses the ad. As stories become more and more popular, the Facebook Stories ads also get better results.
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