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3 Easy Tips to Get Your Site Looking More Professional
Ask yourself, does your web site look professional? If you'reinterested in making money online, you have no choice but tomake sure that it does. Whether you're selling running shoesor providing weekend getaways, it's imperative that your siteprojects the ...

Css In Flash The Return Of Crisp And Legible Fonts.
A typical challenge faced by Flash developers like me is getting fonts to look like you want then to. For any project choosing the right font face and size is a process that requires both you and ultimately the client to see eye to eye.In Flash MX and ...

Designing know hows
What is the purpose of a good design? A good design is like a logo. It stands for what the company is for. In getting a design, one should consider how it will be of use. It can be made of more than one type, depending on the preference of a company, as ...


Google
4 Tips to a More Visitor-Friendly Website
 
amazing thing ever created; it had Flash, Javascript, an
animated graphic I designed all on my own, plus various
bits of 'artwork' placed at strategic locations throughout
the site. Plus it used frames, something I thought would
ease navigation for my visitors. What an astonishing
display of talent!

Now when I look back on that first website, I'm forced to
come to an inescapable conclusion:

It sucked.

You see, like so many beginners, I had succumbed to the
lure of 'technology'. Instead of designing my site
according to what my *visitors* wanted, I designed it
around what *I* wanted to show off.

Don't make these common website blunders! Visitors come
to your site for a reason - make it easy for them to get
what they want. Here are a few tips ...

__1. Don't Use Flash Frivolously.

Flash movies are all the rage these days. Sure, it's new
and cool and can do all sorts of neat things - but just
because you CAN use it doesn't mean you SHOULD.

This is particularly true of content-rich websites.
Visitors come to your site looking for information, not
for an in-your-face Flash movie. Annoy them and it only
takes a simple click of the mouse before they're gone
forever.

Flash requires users to download a plug-in, if they don't
already have it. It can chew up your machine's resources
and make it darn near impossible to get out - even a 'Skip
Intro' link is hard to click on if your computer is too
involved with Flash! And it takes too long to load. Not
everyone has a high-speed modem!

Of course there are legitimate reasons to use Flash. For
example, graphic artists or web designers who sell their
Flash talents will want to showcase it. If you use it
make sure you give people the OPTION of viewing it or
not. A couple of suggestions are:

* Put two links on your entry page: one to view the site
using Flash, the other to view it without Flash.

* Move your Flash movies deeper within your site. If
your visitor wants to view them, they can simply click
on a link.

__2. Use Graphics Sparingly.

The *right* picture can say a thousand words. But don't
use graphics for the sake of using them; unless they
convey something specific and relevant to your site then
you might as well leave them


off.

How many times have you come across an agonizingly slow
site, filled with images dancing, whirling, bouncing,
and beckoning to you from the screen? It's irritating
to say the least.

If you have to display a lot of graphics on one page,
make them into thumbnails. Visitors can click on the
image they want to see in order to view the full-sized
version.

Also be sure you compress your images to make them as
small as possible, and specify the image WIDTH and
HEIGHT in your HTML tag.

__3. Forget the Frames.

A lot of people like the look of frames. However, search
engines cannot read them properly and improperly designed
frames can leave your visitor 'trapped'. You can bet
they'll never be back if you try to force them to stay!

BigNoseBird.com has a nice little tutorial on how to get
the 'Frames look' without actually using them. Read it
at http://bignosebird.com/k3.shtml .

__4. Keep it Simple - and Use Common Sense.

The simpler and cleaner your HTML, the more likely it will
display exactly as you intended on different browsers.

* Limit the number of fonts and colors you use. Pick a
color scheme and stick to it.

* Keep your navigation consistent from page to page.

* If you use Javascript or VBScript, provide another way
of viewing your information. Not all browsers support
them.

* Use tables to properly layout your site. Don't force
your visitors to use the dreaded horizontal scroll bar
to read your information! Tables can also add white
space to your site for easier readability.

* Spell-check! A site filed with speling errs is veery
heard to reed.

* At a minimum, check your site with the two most popular
browsers, Internet Explorer and Netscape.

Creating a web page is easy. Creating a *good* web page,
however, takes a little more thought. Offer a content-rich
site that's a pleasure to visit and your visitors will keep
coming back!

About the Author
Angela is the editor of Online Business Basics, a
newsletter for eBusiness beginners. OBB features ongoing
tutorials on how to build a profitable Internet business
*without* spending a lot of money. Subscribe today and
get '101 High-Profit Businesses You Can Start on the
Internet' absolutely free! For details, visit
http://www.onlinebusinessbasics.com/article.html

News



Women to Know: A fan of fonts
Herald Times Reporter
Stephanie Carpenter, assistant director of the Hamilton Wood Type & Printing Museum in Two Rivers, poses inside the museum's working pressroom. / Sue Pischke/HTR This article appears in the Sunday, Feb. 12 Lakeshore YOU section of the Herald Times ...


ComputerActive.co.uk

Why ebooks have problems with fonts, footnotes and typos
ComputerActive.co.uk
Fonts are one problem, particularly on the Kindle. There's no easy way to 'embed' a font into a Kindle ebook, so most publishers are limited to using the default font supplied with the Kindle. It's fine in general but not so good for uses such as ...

and more »

Bad fonts just leave me feeling uncomfortable
Hong Kong Standard
Certainly, I have toyed with different fonts for homework and projects ever since I started using the computer, but I had never thought of it as a major design specialty like painting or sculpture. In fact, it influences almost everything we lay our ...


Chattanooga Times Free Press

Chattanooga designers work to capture city's soul and translate it to a unique ...
Chattanooga Times Free Press
“Slab-serif fonts were commonly used in industry in the 1950s and '60s,” said Jeremy Dooley, one of the type designers working on the project. “It's heavy and it has a lot of impact.” The typeface has square geometric elements, which are meant to evoke ...

and more »

Avería: an "average" font
Boing Boing
By Cory Doctorow at 12:05 pm Saturday, Feb 4 Dan Sayers ("I am not a type designer") decided to explore "generative" type-design by seeing what happened when he "averaged out" a large number of fonts. Once he got his teeth into the problem, ...