three people blogging who use “mikel” in their name. There’s me, the always impressive Shmuel Mikel, and Micha (Mikel) Lewandowski from Poland, who keeps a weblog in his native Polish. My name, as I have written before, comes from the way my brother used to spell it when he’d leave me notes or whatever. I actually don’t spell my name that way in real life, I spell it the conventional way. But as my online life has pretty much merged with my real life, people seem to mix and match spellings now.
Zeldman
: “Our stupid industry pitifully undervalues good web writing.” Bravo! In my experience this is completely correct. Sadly a lot of writers resist learning about the web as well, and so can’t transition to becoming good web writers in the first place.
Zeldman does repeat the old saw that people don’t read, though, which I simply don’t believe. They don’t read everything on every page. But if there’s actual unique content, they’ll read it. They do every day – millions of people read websites very thoroughly. But in general I agree with the proposition.
I approach this from the point of view that the workflow involved in developing sites is fatally flawed. Contrary to many, I don’t believe websites are primarily IS/IT projects, or that they should be managed by technical managers. Of all the activities that must be carried out to make a successful website, only about 30% of these are “technical” in the sense that a programmer, DBA, or other coder must be involved. Content development, graphic design, IA – all these are more fundamental to the development of a website than ANY technical function. The leadership of a web project should be done by a person who can speak intelligently to all of those folks: the editors and writers, the programmers doing any application development or DB work, the IA person and the graphic designer. And each of those functions should be done in concert with all the others on the team.
Open call for help
: I have been working on a substantial redesign for this site, using code that will validate as HTML 4.01 Transitional with valid CSS as well. Both the HTML and the CSS validate pretty well. And it looks just as I want it to in Mac IE 5.1.3 and Netscape 6.2.1. Trouble is in Win IE 5.5, it looks like hell. The right margin isn’t being respected, so the links div is superimposed on the main text area. I have checked both Eric Costello‘s and Owen Briggs‘ sites for a leg up, but to no avail. Any assistance will be rewarded with everlasting appreciation and respect!
Brainstorms and Raves
is quite a wonderful site in general. I’ll definitely be returning.
Brainstorms and Raves
: Accessibility Lockout for Olympics 2002 Site — Again?!. A good quick rundown of some problems with the official site for the Games this winter. Add to it that the site’s URLs are virtually useless. Accessibility in the case of this site is a problem even for fully able people with regular browsers using all the tools built in. It’s too bad, it’s a huge missed opportunity. Doing a site like that should be an opportunity for some really innovative work – but it was clearly squandered. I’d love to get my hands on a project like that and hire a dream team to develop the thing.
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