The last time the 1024px issue was brought up was in early 2015. I wonder what the user metrics are now it's 2017.
Personally, while I do have other machines with bigger displays, I'm currently dividing most of my time between my ThinkPad T43 and my ThinkPad X61, which both run at 1024x768. There is an undeniable bit of friction using SO on these due to the omnipresent horizontal scrollbar visible on every page.
Now that the site has been redesigned I thought it might be worth revisiting this old question. In particular, I wanted to point out that the boxes on the right side of edit pages (eg, #scroller
) are position:fixed
and do not horizontally scroll even when they extend off the right of the page. This diverges somewhat from the (downvoted) official answer in the old thread: "it shouldn't be broken, but we're not going to make it pixel perfect." Well, the theme is now broken.
I found it interesting to observe how Jeff Atwood himself popped out of the woodwork to chime in and argue for a responsive design when this was being discussed in January 2015. Food for thought.
TL;DR: There (apparently) aren't enough 1024px users to statistically justify a site change. There are, however, enough users out there that this issue will continue to be quietly brought up every now and again. Fixing this across the entire Stack Exchange network for those people would be amazing. :D
Another question: I'm curious what types of metrics you're using. Do you send a new ping on each page load? Browser windows might be different sizes from different visits. The 15" Macbook Pro has a 2880px-wide display... users might want to split SO with their code editor or another window.