Via Zeldman I came across a wonderful little tutorial about website production. It’s very good, although it does diverge somewhat from my usual path. The divergence mostly has to do with the fact that I generally have started on projects prior to the point where the article picks things up. For large projects, much of the early “production” work – the content definition and sourcing, preliminary architecture issues, and basic site organization comes in the proposal phase, when the goal is to do as much as you can to keep the whole thing as a mental, and flowcharted, model – because if nothing has been signed, you want to keep expenses down. More or less.
Oh my
. The third item down (as of this writing) is a piece about whispers going around that Automatic-Media is in trouble. Of course Automatic-Media is the year-old umbrella that includes Suck and Feed, plus Plastic.
The sad thing for me is that it’s not really a shock. We’ve been hearing stories like this for ages now – even though this one doesn’t seem to include the otherwise required extravagance. That’s not to say that it wouldn’t be a tremendous loss, though, either.
It’s not fashionable to say, but a whole lot of the web can be traced back directly to Suck, for instance. If it were a rock and roll family tree, Suck would be Robert Johnson or someone – not always remembered, but totally fundamental. Feed would be… who? Well except for the temporal inconsistency with the above, maybe the Velvet Underground or someone – geeky, art-schoolish, but at the very heart of things in important ways.
Newer web people (and old ones too) might think I’m over-stating it, and maybe I am. But still. It’s the old fogey thing to say, but you had to be there when Suck launched. It was a wild time – no names (though Carl and Joey’s authorship was a poorly-kept secret, which was certainly intentional), no lame business model to muddy things. No ugly colour scheme, no gee-whiz graphics save for the title itself.
I hope these are just rumours and that they can work it out if not.
Sometimes one comes across
the most interesting things late at night when one has no business doing so. So here I am, sitting at my computer post-bar, pre-bedtime, reading some nice personal websites. And I follow the link that Jason Kottke has put up to his earliest “daily website” or weblog entry from three years ago. And I find that but days after he started, he made a very pithy comment about the state of the web at that time – and if anything it’s even worse now (if hypertext = better and pseudo-hypertext = worse). I among hundreds of others have made the same comment, both before and after he did. But one of the nice things about the weblog format is that you can date a comment and fix it in time – something that’s hard to do in with quite the same certainty as in a weblog.
Dog bites man
in Wired News today: Record Industry Plays Both Sides.
“We find it exquisitely ironic that the recording industry tries to define the sound recording license (the one it owns) as narrowly as they can for webcasters, but the publisher’s license (the one it pays royalties on) as broadly as possible,” said Jonathan Potter, executive director of the Digital Media Association (DiMA).
One of the things
I’ve been kicking around in my brain: it’s irresponsible to develop a web project that doesn’t feature integrated content management. Doing a site without it means that the site is, essentially, a bolt-on to an existing business, rather than being properly integrated. To me, a bolt-on site is already a failure, traffic figures be damned.
The trick is that the kind of content management that I’m thinking of (accessible to small businesses, to sites that get very low but specialized traffic, and to particular departments within larger organizations) is the opposite of what Vignette or Interwoven offer. It must be low-cost, easily deployed in new situations, and accessible to non-specialists. And it’s not really a technical question to implement such a system – the technical side of things is the least of the problems.
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