- WebWord features an interview with Andy King, Web Site optimization expert, who says, "
For informational sites like WebWord.com or news-related sites, the graphics should be kept to a minimum.
" - Editor and Publisher reports USAToday.com, one of the most-visited American news sites, has begun including related text ads on its story pages -- much like Google AdWords. In the spirit of a recent weblog entry about labeling ads properly, I viewed a sample USAToday.com story in a text-only browser and handheld-browser emulator, and I'm pleased to note that the advertisements were, for the most part, not viewable by those means. The reason: The ads are in an
iframe
. - Simon Willison has written an "Image Drag" bookmarklet that, when clicked, makes a Web site's images draggable. Although it doesn't work in Internet Explorer or on some types of sites, it could be a useful tool in the design process.
- Jakob Nielsen's latest Alertbox column examines "Homepage Real Estate Allocation." The gist: "
In most cases, content and navigation do need the lion's share of space. It's a disgrace that they only account for 39% of the precious pixels on today's limited computer screens.
" - Having acquired my first cellphone three days ago, I found Marc Rettig's Design For Small Screens presentation (PDF file) particularly relevant and informative.
Recommended reading
Written by Adrian Holovaty on February 11, 2003
Comments
Posted by Jay Small on February 13, 2003, at 5:55 p.m.:
Adrian, I'm curious -- what mobile provider and phone did you select? One of the issues about designing for wireless is the vast difference in possible outputs -- from beautiful little color LCDs to crude monochrome displays only a few characters across.
Posted by Adrian on February 13, 2003, at 7:48 p.m.:
I decided to go with Sprint for the phone service, and the Samsung N400 for the phone. It has a decently sized display, and it's in color. I've played with the Web browser for a bit, but, unfortunately, it crashes due to an "out of memory" error more often than not. Haven't yet determined how big (or small) a site has to be in order to crash it. :)
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