While checking various news sites today to read about the power outage on the U.S. East Coast, I noticed two sites -- the Chicago Tribune and CNN -- displayed the news alert via urgent banners at the top of most (all?) article pages. It's a smart idea that helps disseminate breaking news to people who aren't necessarily reading the sites' home pages.
I'd known (and reported) that CNN had such a capability but hadn't seen it in action until today. As for the Trib, this is the first I've heard of their implementation.
Screenshots:
- Chicago Tribune (PNG, 56 KB)
- CNN (PNG, 68 KB)
Comments
Posted by Sara on August 15, 2003, at 12:41 a.m.:
CNN's is much more obvious and noticeable. The Trib's could easily be overlooked.
Posted by Dan Martin on August 15, 2003, at 1:21 a.m.:
Knowing that I was looking for a breaking news banner I still had to strain to find the breaking news banner.
Maybe it's just me, but I don't think either standout too much. It is a great idea though, and it might seem a bit more obvious in context. Thanks for pointing it out Adrian!
Posted by Jon Gales on August 16, 2003, at 12:57 a.m.:
FoxNews.com does this too, except their servers were in NYC and had to be changed over (This is really just a hunch... it was down for a while right after the outage started and then came back with no mention of what happened). It's yellow and really grabs attention.
Maybe it's related to the server change I theorized, but the site is redirecting to http://www.foxnews.com.edgesuite.net/ for me.
Posted by kpaul on August 16, 2003, at 5:01 a.m.:
I'm getting the FoxNews redirect too. Weird.
Re: the breaking news (whew, there aren't crazy text scrollers like on tv yet), i like the Trib's better - seemed more dignified and integrated as part of the site.
Posted by Adrian on August 16, 2003, at 7:30 a.m.:
It's interesting that some of you guys didn't think the alerts stood out -- maybe that's because you're not regular readers of the site, and therefore it wasn't a significant change? I read chicagotribune.com regularly, so the site's red banner stood out immediately, despite its smaller size.
I agree with kpaul that the Trib's was more dignified. CNN's was too in-your-face for my liking. The different approaches seem to reflect the typical newspaper vs. TV-news mentalities, respectively.
Posted by Nathan Ashby-Kuhlman on August 16, 2003, at 2:30 p.m.:
I'm not a regular reader of either site, so I bet that is why neither really stand out for me either. My brain dismisses those blocks of color as part of the header and ignores them, whereas a regular reader would instantly go, "hey, they changed the header." I think they might be more noticeable if they weren't butted up against the header like that -- if instead those bright banners were clearly a part of the content area, surrounded by lots of white space padding to separate them from the header. Put them right where I've trained myself to look for a headline, not the area I've trained myself to ignore.
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