Friday, February 3rd, 2006
Page Source Order & Accessibility
Study on some current usability practices and how they actually work in the field.
Perpetual nodesign in process…
the cobbler's shoes and all that.
Page Source Order & Accessibility
Study on some current usability practices and how they actually work in the field.
Week in review: Sony’s sour note | CNET News.com
In the right column they’ve put a “perspective” box to show you a tree of how this story fits in with other news… Not extremely useful but curious.
Ning is a free online service (yeah but if it’s a service how’ll it remain free?) allowing one to easily build and use social applications.
What is social software?
It tends to be a web application enabling one to post content, e.g., photos, bookmarks, reviews, and easily match, transact, or communicate with other people. The matching/transacting/communicating [...]
mambofrog
This guy thinks too much like me.
Bloug: Updated Enterprise IA Roadmap
This is fantastic. Much like we are doing at Bowdoin on the web site… at least that’s the goal set in last summer’s redesign. The top tier is particularly useful and our home page is the “politicized page”; perhaps after we launch the new “academics” section that will be the so [...]
A first look at Google Scholar: What’s included and what’s not
Tina sent the link to this nice summary of Google Scholar.
A Simplified Model for Facet Analysis
The purpose of this study is to propose a simplified model for facet analysis that incorporates the principles of facet analysis proposed by both Ranganathan and the CRG. The purpose of this simplified model is to act primarily as a teaching tool to introduce LIS students to a consolidated, and [...]
editorsweblog.org: New media acquisitions: New York Times becomes a dominant web player
“About. com was founded in 1997 with a simple premise, that people are the best Guides to the Internet. We have built on that belief over the past seven years. Today, when you read an article on About.com, you are tapping into a powerful [...]
Like anyone who designs I want ultimate control. Sure, the typical email postcard with text in a div next to an image is nice and it works… but wouldn’t it be great to have really control it and composite the text into a bitmap!?
Oh wait, that’d be like 2nd generation web design (which some [...]
Been thinking about the home page, and the site with regard to a search field on every page instead of a link to a search page. What comes first? Giving people the easy way to search or attempting to get them into your content?
Some studies show that people look in the middle of the page [...]
Search Engine Optimisation and Accessibility
plasticbag.org | weblog | Using Wikis for content management…
Now one of the problems with using Wikis generally is that they don’t lend themselves to the creation of clear sectionalised navigation. Nor do they do naturally find it easy to use graphic design, colour or layout differently on separate pages to communicate either your context or [...]
Navigation Study on Current University Websites
Ken Kelleher prepared a useful overview of IA challenges on University web sites.
Our main points he describes:
- varied audiences
- site architecture (taxonomy) vs. faceted view (audience gateways)
He also lists a lot of the references I have in my bookmarks. This is a paper I have written but not. :)
Brown has an interesting entry point into their course web site pages.
Essentially turns browsing course web pages into an application for viewing the data in different ways. You can filter based on department and semester. Very easy to do (given the right background architecture and likely increases the usability a lot.
Just wanted to note this. We vetted the reasons why we can’t use a horizontal menu bar at the secondary, or departmental level navigation.
Anyway, I was looking at this essay seven resolutions for 2004 and noticed how nice their navigation is… wishing we could somehow build and/or enforce a stricter sense of IA on dept [...]