the really cool thread over at Dreamless.org as suggested by some of my favourite weblogs. Lots of good stuff there, to which I have a quick reaction. It’s not clear to me if that discussion is really about “good sites” or “well designed sites”. So – where do writers and other content folks fit in? What about non-designer integrators? What about the other folks who have, with designers, built the web all these years?
Archives for 2000
But there’s this:
Joliet Volume Access for your Mac. I know you’re out there – I check my stats. Over 25% of visitors to this site use a Mac. And I know that a good proportion of you get CDs from other developers or clients that use Win95/98/whatever. Now you can figure out what’s in those files by reading their names, which will no longer be truncated to 8/3 but intelligently displayed with longer names. It’s stable too.
Not much today
cause I’ve been wildly busy. Work is always more interesting (ahem), and my side projects are building up.
One thing to add
on the whole “what do people look at most” front – and it’s important (to me). I think that the study makes an unnatural and unsupportable distinction between text and graphics per se, at least as far as they are used on the WWW. In the stuff I’ve read, graphics = pictures accompanying the text. But on the web, things don’t work like that. After all, even the most solidly text-based sites have some graphical component – even if it’s just the logo. And even in that case, there’s still the layout of the text to consider – which is a design concern though not necessarily “graphic” design as most people (perhaps incorrectly?) use the term. So – that people don’t tend to concentrate on the pictures doesn’t necessarily have a lot to do with more fundamental questions – the ones so many of us spend our time answering.
Further, when you start down that road – and consider that a page isn’t much use at all without some rudimentary (at least) navigational context indications – i.e., the page doesn’t stand alone – then the fact that this is usually done using graphical techniques means that it’s really impossible to separate text from graphics as neatly as all that. So, although the study is interesting, in a way, it’s also pretty marginal, at least to my web practice.
After having seen
her most excellent site, including a not-frequently updated weblog, I think we would disagree on a lot and agree on a lot as well. But it’s a beautiful site, and I’m not really talking about the design (though it’s very nice).
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