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You are here: Home > Internet and Businesses Online > Web Design > Web Design 2.0: Step Up, Then Get Out of the Way |
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Hub You - Web Design 2.0: Step Up, Then Get Out of the Way
Web Page Accessibility - Placing Content First With CSS (with emphasis on personal independence, what friends think, and defiance to the establishment), then Web design could be in for a rough ride. And it's the responsibility of the design community to provide some proper adult supervision through this phase.Search engines give more weight to a web page that has content closer to the top of the HTML document. I am refering to the source code not the visual content you see in your browser. If you incorporate this in the design of your web site, it may just give you the edge to outrank your competitors.Most web sites these days are designed with tables therefore the naviga So what does that mean, practically? It means embracing new technologies like AJAX for Demand for Spam? It exists Technology, at its best, is transparent – it's the invisible lubricant between what I want to do, and having done it. A ball-point pen, for example, is successful because it requires very little from me to make it work. I can put ink to paper without needing to think about all the messy and mechanical things a writer had to deal with in the past.Do you like spam? No, I'm not kidding. Everybody knows what spam is, almost everybody seems to have learned by heart simple advice like "do not click …" "do not respond…" , "do not buy…" but--On March 23, 2005 Mirapoint and the Radicati Group, a consulting and market research firm, released preliminary results of their end-user survey on email hygiene. "This prelim The same idea holds true for Web 2.0 technologies. We're seeing a decentralization of media creation and distribution as blogs grow to challenge traditional publications. Wikis and open source are driving the co-operative creation of everything from content to code. This in turn is leading to an environment in which applications are becoming as rich on the Web as on the PC, with the advantage of being faster to market, adaptive and componentized, so they can be snapped together to create any number of new user experiences. Why not pair a satellite mapping service with an ad-supported local business directory? What about being able to update your code base in a matter of minutes, rather than hours? In a way, the original promise of the Web - what you want, how you want it, easily - is coming true. Unfortunately these great strides aren't always being matched by great design. The leveling aspect of free Web applications is also creating a lowest common denominator in terms of user interface. If 2.0 marks the Web’s adolescence (with emphasis on personal independence, what friends think, and defiance to the establishment), then Web design could be in for a rough ride. And it's the responsibility of the design community to provide some proper adult supervision through this phase. So what does that mean, practically? It means embracing new technologies like AJAX for a Two Words That Can Change Your Life p>While I encourage you to follow your parent’s direction and always use “please” and “thank you” as they are greatly appreciated by all, these are not the words I reference in the title of today’s post. The words that I’ll share with you in the text that follows are not used nearly often enough and when used correctly can make a dramatic difference in raising your productivi The same idea holds true for Web 2.0 technologies. We're seeing a decentralization of media creation and distribution as blogs grow to challenge traditional publications. Wikis and open source are driving the co-operative creation of everything from content to code. This in turn is leading to an environment in which applications are becoming as rich on the Web as on the PC, with the advantage of being faster to market, adaptive and componentized, so they can be snapped together to create any number of new user experiences. Why not pair a satellite mapping service with an ad-supported local business directory? What about being able to update your code base in a matter of minutes, rather than hours? In a way, the original promise of the Web - what you want, how you want it, easily - is coming true. Unfortunately these great strides aren't always being matched by great design. The leveling aspect of free Web applications is also creating a lowest common denominator in terms of user interface. If 2.0 marks the Web’s adolescence (with emphasis on personal independence, what friends think, and defiance to the establishment), then Web design could be in for a rough ride. And it's the responsibility of the design community to provide some proper adult supervision through this phase. So what does that mean, practically? It means embracing new technologies like AJAX for Keyword Research - A Better Way s rich on the Web as on the PC, with the advantage of being faster to market, adaptive and componentized, so they can be snapped together to create any number of new user experiences. Why not pair a satellite mapping service with an ad-supported local business directory? What about being able to update your code base in a matter of minutes, rather than hours? In a way, the original promise of the Web - what you want, how you want it, easily - is coming true.Keyword research is a necessity for doing business online. The best site in the world needs to have decent keywords, or it won't be found. If fishing enthusiasts are searching for "fishing," they'll never find your site on "angling." However, maybe you can't compete with "fishing" either. Too many quality sites are already in the search engine results. How do you find keywo Unfortunately these great strides aren't always being matched by great design. The leveling aspect of free Web applications is also creating a lowest common denominator in terms of user interface. If 2.0 marks the Web’s adolescence (with emphasis on personal independence, what friends think, and defiance to the establishment), then Web design could be in for a rough ride. And it's the responsibility of the design community to provide some proper adult supervision through this phase. So what does that mean, practically? It means embracing new technologies like AJAX for Want More Sales? Write A Barry Bonds Sales Letter than hours? In a way, the original promise of the Web - what you want, how you want it, easily - is coming true.I'm not a baseball fan. Never have been. In fact, I hate the sport. However, I am a Barry Bonds fan. Here's why: Barry Bonds possesses the exact same intangibles every great sales letter possesses. He's loyal, consistent, powerful, and hits a ton of home runs, year after year after year! Those are all things that great sales letters do and have done from the very beginning. Unfortunately these great strides aren't always being matched by great design. The leveling aspect of free Web applications is also creating a lowest common denominator in terms of user interface. If 2.0 marks the Web’s adolescence (with emphasis on personal independence, what friends think, and defiance to the establishment), then Web design could be in for a rough ride. And it's the responsibility of the design community to provide some proper adult supervision through this phase. So what does that mean, practically? It means embracing new technologies like AJAX for Ask a Simple Question, Get Everything But the Answer (with emphasis on personal independence, what friends think, and defiance to the establishment), then Web design could be in for a rough ride. And it's the responsibility of the design community to provide some proper adult supervision through this phase.Has it ever happened that you ask someone, what seems to be a simple question, and they don’t seem to be able to give you a straight answer?Do you wonder if you are not communicating clearly?There are a number of factors that can have an impact on the person you asked the question of. Once you have determined that the question was not unreasonable, was underst So what does that mean, practically? It means embracing new technologies like AJAX for a dynamic page; tagging searches with multi-directional 'folksonomies' rather than ranked taxonomies, for more flexible, intuitive results; and providing multiple points of entry versus hierarchical navigation schemes for friction-free flow. How this translates into design on the pixel level will vary, but as professionals, I think we have a mandate and a responsibility to our clients to be best-in-class in any design arena, and it's incumbent on us to be fluent in all aspects of the web as it continues to evolve. I don't presume to tell you how to design sites here, but I do want to suggest this guiding principle: understand how these new technologies are shifting the way people use the Web, and shift your approach to interface design accordingly. Provide the appropriate technology in the most user-directed, functional way, and get out of the way. Because at the end of the day, the utility of a design isn't measured in how many technology stripes you can point to on your sleeve. It's measured by how often people use your site, and how good the experience is. The goal, for any of us, should be to provide an experience that asks as little as possible from an end-user. It must be seamless, much as the smooth motion of that ball-point pen.
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