If users want to post to a specific community, they click on the community on the “general post” page, and then they can craft their message for that community.
Each community is able to establish rules that govern user behavior. Not all groups have explicit rules. This image is an example of the rules for the “news” community.
This page is the “about” section for the “awww” community. Users see a description of the community, are able to enable notifications, can report posts, and can leave the group.
This image is an example of what users see when they click on a story in a community. This story is part of the “Awww” category. This story comes from Facebook. If users want to see this story/video, they click on the link and are taken to Facebook.
This image is an example of what users might post to the “Awww” community page, only in list form. In this form, users can see more stories or updates on the screen at one time.
This image is an example of a notification that was received. Imzy alerted the user to a story that they thought the user would be interested in viewing (Tesla).
This page provides all the communities the user can be part of. These do not seem to be organized in any logical fashion, but each “community” lists a short description, the number of members, and a corresponding image.
This page is an example of the interest category “animals.” On this page, users can scroll through different communities that correspond with the animal category.
This page lists “interest” categories the user can select. Each interest category takes the user to a list of community pages that correspond with the interest category.
This is Imzy's “About” page. When users click on the “about” page on the app, they are redirected to Imzy’s website. This page informs the users about the social media site.
If users click on the requests tab in the account information section of the app, users are redirected to a help website where they can ask questions and make requests.