Archive for the ‘Web Design’ Category

Essential Tips to Make Your Website User Friendly

Monday, December 8th, 2008
opera browser
Rogger asked:


You don’t want your website guest to shift to another site in a jiffy just because he could not talk with you, right? In other words, you desperately need to make your website a user-friendly one. In other words still, your website design needs a face-lift to suit the rapidly growing demands and trends of the web world. Keeping a few points in mind while websites designing will be of immense help.

Communication: A world where people are now far more vociferous about their opinions, likes, dislikes and tastes and prefer posting them instantly on the web an easy way of communication with the website owner is what they will expect above everything else. Allowing your website visitor the minimum level of communicative comfort is ideally what you need to look forward to. Revamp it with options that will facilitate the users to easily talk with you or place an order or give their feedback since people nowadays widely prefer one to one communication.

Browser compatibility: A generous availability of alternative browsers like Mozilla, Netscape and Opera apart from Internet Explorer poses problem for the visitor as certain designs look different on different browsers. In this context your website needs a higher level of browser compatibility to allow the design to be viewed as equally good in every other browser.

Navigation: To generate an easy flow of navigation through the main page and the other links you need to have them clearly identified. See to it that returning to the main page requires just one click. For sites with over three levels, “breadcrumbs” can be a good option. They present your click path as: Home > Section 2 > Subsection B > Page 4.

Lesser use of graphics: Web design firms advise lesser use of graphics than text content so as to generate an easy and fast uploading procedure. Make sure that your web design services offer an usage of ALT Tags as well as CSS (custom style sheets) to let the text readers read the content easily. You will like your site to be able to be accessed by one and all, including the visually challenged, right?

Avoidance of Flash: Avoiding use of Flash while pepping up your website is advisable as flash animations are usually huge in size and it will be hugely time consuming for dial-up users to loading them. Also, search engine optimization service gets hampered as flash websites fail to be crawled by leading search engines, which blatantly indicates a negative signal in the reception of free traffic from the search engines. In fact, SEO services remains the foremost significant area of concern whenever you are planning to deal with web design services.

Once your website is equipped with the aspects that will make it user friendly you can expect a huge browser footfall and more loyalty out of them.



Danny

Web Design Articles - Practical Web Designing Basics:

Monday, November 24th, 2008
opera browser
Anantait asked:


The following are the key aspects which would help you practically craft a web design that would deliver results in terms of your audience visibility

 

 

Part 1: The Unavoidables

 

Definition of a good Web site: A site that delivers quality and eshaustive information for its target audience and does so with elegance and style.

 

The rule of “Keep it Simple, Sober” is tried and tested, but it’s not a be-all end-all of Web design. Gamers, for example, expect a busy page with a lot of sophisticated graphics, flash effects, and the like. The usual understated page with the off-white background and the typical menu of links sedately trundling down the left side of the display leaves this audience cold; obviously the people who designed this Website aren’t on their wavelength — these guys like plenty of whizz-bang in the pages they visit.

On the other hand, when a middle aged lady goes on the Web to hunt down some nice crockery for kitchen, she isn’t going to want jazzy Flash effects, purple-on-black color styles, and a raft of animated graphics doing gymnastics in front of her rheumy old eyes. She’s been known to take a stick to the monitor to make it all stop. Corporate users expect something that might not necessarily be “buttoned-down,” but certainly something solid and professional that reflects positively on their business and compares well with the competition. Personal home pages want an emphasis on the personal — the site should reflect the interests and personality of the owner.

 

Attract Your Audience – Visually

 

The key here is to know who is going to be using your page, and to design with their needs and desires in mind. The KISS rule generally holds good in most cases. If you don’t need something — a frame, an animated graphic, a Flash animation, a fancy DHTML effect, don’t use it. After all you don’t want an uninteresting page full of unbroken blocks of text with a dull color scheme and dreary graphics won’t attract anyone’s attention. Use everything moderately. Keep your audience in mind and design your site accordingly.

Every image that moves or blinks draws your visitors’ attention to itself. Be sure that it doesn’t distract them from your message. Whatever your site’s reason for being, you want to portray an image that conveys what your site is all about as well as the feelings you want to implant in your audience. It’s no coincidence that most financial sites use design and graphical tactics to give a feeling of safety and stability. No matter what the stock market does, this site won’t have its feathers ruffled. In contrast, the ultra-hyper site design of the Nickelodeon and Cartoon Network sites appeal to their sugared-up audience of pre-teens and teenagers; you can’t overstimulate that crowd. A site selling luxurious designer ware isn’t going to use the same design scheme as a site selling automobile spares! One will go for a colourful shades in the design, while the other will use a rough-and tough looking design scheme.

A good Web designer will be able to design all four sites, and others as well. Don’t forget, if you’re designing a Website for a corporation or business, that they very likely have trademarks, logos, color themes, and other elements that will need to be included in your design scheme. Colour speaks volumes about your company even before the surfer reads your content of the web site.

 

Appealing to Multiple Audiences

 

If you’re trying to design a page that will appeal to both the middle aged ones and their hyperactive, TV& Gamestation addicted grandsons and granddaughters, then you’re going to have to make some compromises that could possibly alienate both audiences. You may want to consider refining your site to appeal to a narrower audience, or you may even choose to mount separate pages with different design approach for different audiences. In this case, you might do well to produce an introductory, or “doorway,” page with links to the “whizz-bang” and the “sedate” pages — the content might essentially be the same, but the design style would be dramatically different.

 

Connections Options

 

And don’t forget what your audience uses to access your site. Not everyone has a broadband or T1 connection; most of the world still limps along with slow dial-up connections, or must flounder around the Net through a maze of network connections. These folks appreciate your limiting your usage of big, slow-loading graphics, or at the least, providing thumbnails that automatically load and allow them to click for a bigger (and slower-loading) display. Remember, .JPG graphics are generally bigger than either .GIFs or .PNGs (Flash animations, surprisingly enough, load fairly quickly considering their complexity, but they can slow down a page, particularly one accessed over a dial-up connection). Complex table structures can take a while to load, too, especially if they’re loaded with graphics. Slow servers cause slow downloads; if your provider can’t get your site up to speed, switch to someone who can.

Design for the World Wide Web is the smart balancing act between the graphic “wow” and the real-time “now.”

“Elegance” is a favorite term to describe good, clean Web design, but what it actually means is up to the interpretation of the designer and the site user. It actuallu should mean using a decent design, with well-chosen colors and graphical choices that don’t stress the eye, but instead induce the visitor to relax and enjoy the content. It’s the difference between being wooed over a candlelight dinner and being juggled in the overloaded elevator!

 

What type of HTML Should You Choose?

 

Every Web page conforms to a version of HTML (or XHTML, or even XML, though we’re not going into those here), and is determined by the DOCTYPE (document type) code. The line:

 

at the top of your page (above the initial tag) covers your bases in most cases. It supports many of the elements of the latest version of HTML, 4.01 Strict, supports style sheets for the most part, but also supports most deprecated or no longer current HTML elements, frames, link targets, and other attributes not allowed in by-the book HTML 4.01. This document type also keeps older browsers such as Netscape 4.x in the game. If you’re designing to the latest HTML standards and/or using sophisticated style sheets, then this doctype:

 

“http://www.w3.org/TR/html4/strict.dtd”>

should be used, but be aware that a lot of older browsers won’t display your page properly. Neither can you use frames unless you use the “frameset” version of this doctype. Note, too, that the “transitional” DOCTYPE I cite doesn’t include the URL of a DTD, or document type declaration. This is because using URLs in a DOCTYPE element sends some browsers, including IE into Strict mode, defeating the purpose of the “transitional” DOCTYPE.

Of course, you could just slide bare-cheeked on the ice and use no doctype in your pages at all (just use the tag), but that’s not a good solution. That leaves the individual’s browser to choose how to display the page, and while most browsers will cope just fine with the situation, some will ***. Besides, you need to get into the habit of using a DOCTYPE element. If you don’t know a DOCTYPE from a typewriter, use the “transitional” doctype at the beginning of this section. If you know about the various doctypes, or if you’re coding in XHTML, then make your own choice. The decision to use the “transitional” doctype is safe and conservative, but it’s certainly not an up-to-date choice. If you want to ensure that your Web page is ready for modern browsing and will be compliant with current and upcoming Web standards, you’ll need to learn about CSS (Cascading Style Sheets), HTML 4.01, and XHTML.

Note: You can visit the W3C Validator to check your document for compliance with W3C standards, or use Dave Raggett’s acclaimed HTML Tidy program, now an open-source project.

 

Browser Compatibility

 

During the initial days when the web was still a tabu among the users the novice Web developers designed the pages with Netscape for Windows in mind; as that was by far the most popular browser in use, designing the site for Netscape/PC users was “good enough” to satisfy the majority of users, and never mind the rest. Nowadays the same lot of designers make their pages for Windows and Internet Explorer, for the same reasons. This is where they lack in approach.

Millions of Windows users still employ Netscape (or the open-source Mozilla). Many others use Opera. Some AOL users are still trundling along with their out-of-date AOL browsers, and some hard-core folks still swear by Lynx, the text-only browser (there’s also the surprisingly large contingent of users who keep graphics switched off and read only text). Then, there’s WebTV to be reckoned with. And there are differences between the Mac browsers and the Windows browsers of the same name, not to mention the Mac browsers Cyberdog, OmniWeb, Chimera, iCab, and others. There are the browsers for Linux such as Konqueror, Opera for Linux, Mozilla for Linux, and others. According to the Browser Archive at Evolt, there are well over 100 browsers out there being used by someone and many of them are obsolete now. Why should the Web designer care? Because your page won’t display the same from one browser to the next. The more plugged-in designer uses one method or another, either client-side or server-side, to detect what browser his/her visitor is using, and “tailors” the code they send to that particular browser. But if you don’t want or can’t do something so slick, what can you do to meet the needs of your various visitors with their options of browsers?

Basically, the best thing to do is to be aware of the HTML tags and other features and protocols that one browser will support and others won’t, and avoid them whenever possible: the infamous “marquee” and “blink” tags come to mind, as do iFrames, layers, JavaScript, style sheets, plug-ins, DHTML, and others. Some of these, such as “blink” tags and layers, are long out-of-date; others such as DHTML and JavaScript are quite current. If you do use something that is browser-specific, choose a function that isn’t critical to your visitors’ ability to view your site: an example is the neat color schemes for the horizontal and vertical scrollbars that IE provides for. Netscape users will just get the plain-Jane grey bars, but it doesn’t hurt them to not have the colored scrollbars — it doesn’t affect the way your site presents its message and handles its content.

 

Page Features compatibility Across Browsers?

 

There are plenty of page features that will cause problems for one browser or another. Forms come quickly to mind, as do text size and display size. The way you code a link can be a problem: for example, the following link will work in most versions of IE, because the browser will process the code, but most versions of Netscape will report it as a broken link:

Go Here

Why? Because of the white space between “go” and “here.” IE will deal with it, but Netscape won’t. If you want it to work in Netscape or anything else, you have to write it as such:

Go Here

If it’s your file, go one better by renaming the file GOHERE.HTML and avoiding the whole issue.

Another example is the site that looks good in IE, Netscape/Mozilla, and even Konqueror, except that the fonts render badly in the latter. Konqueror users should be able to fix the problem on their end easily enough by clicking “Zoom In” on their browser. Your response can be to rework your page to look as good in Konqueror as in the Windows/Mac browsers, or you can let the Konqueror users handle it themselves. If you’re working on a broad-based audience of mostly Mac and Windows users, your best bet might be to let well enough alone and let the Konqueror users handle it for themselves. If you have a large component of Linux users, you might want to fix the problem so that Konqueror users don’t have to deal with the issue. It’s your call, and your audience.

 

 

As Compatible as Possible

 

Browser incompatibility is a huge issue, and one that’s being grappled with at all levels of the Internet. Meanwhile, you can cope by becoming aware of the plethora of HTML tags that work in one browser but don’t work in another. You can decide whether or not to use extensions, plug-ins such as ActiveX, JavaScript, and even style sheets, which don’t work well in older browsers (and can be iffy in some current browsers) but are essential in modern HTML coding. You can decide whether or not to use more up-to-date graphics such as .PNGs, which will one day become a Web standard but for now don’t work in older browsers.

Quick and dirty fix: make sure your page looks good in Internet Explorer, Netscape 4.x, Netscape 6/Mozilla, and Opera — that means downloading these browsers to your machine and testing your site in them (find the older Netscape browsers available for download at the Netscape Archive). Use features such as style sheets, JavaScript, and DHTML sparingly; if you use these features for critical elements of your page such as a navigational scheme, provide your less up-to-date visitors with a more technologically conservative alternative. Don’t use browser-specific code and expect your visitors without that particular browser to just “get over it,” and don’t skirt the issue with a craven “Works best in *** browser” label. Try to address the needs of every member of your audience, and be aware that you can’t create a site that works wonders for everyone everywhere!



Constance

The Key to Good Web Design

Friday, October 3rd, 2008
opera browser
Paul Myers asked:


The key to good web design

 

The objective of any reputable, proficient web designer is to create an aesthetically pleasing, easily accessible and navigable website which has the clients best business interests included from the start of the project. The web site should convey trust; it should inform the website user that the webmaster is trustworthy and that the website can be used safely, therefore the website will convince the visitor to either; register with the site and make a purchase if the site is ecommerce enabled and/or make an enquiry if the website is offering a service.

 

A good web design is easy to achieve – if you choose the correct web designer. The web designer you choose should be able to demonstrate good graphic design capabilities, be able to create instinctive site navigation by developing the site with the user in mind and be able to optimise the website for good initial search engine results as part of the design. This can be achieved through developing a clear logical site layout, site structure and a clear internal linking strategy.

 

The following suggestions offer some precious web design guidelines.

 

Site Navigation

 

 

Prepare your site navigation before designing the site, a clean-cut and uniform navigation system is a must to prevent cluttering up the site with forgotten links. Site navigation should be well thought out, as well as being simple and intuitive; this is quite often overlooked by website designers. Remember the three click rule: Research has shown if a visitor cannot access the information they want within three clicks, they will leave the site. Every area of your website should be reachable within three clicks from anywhere else on the site. If you use anything other than simple text links, make sure to test your navigation in all the major browsers.

 

Maintain a site map to help people and Search Engines robots (SE’s) find, and index in the case of SE’s, what they are looking for with ease. It is worth while remembering that navigation should be flexible enough to accommodate additional links in case you will be adding pages periodically. Link Check:  Test all site links and navigation to be certain that they are valid. Nothing chases a visitor off faster than broken links. Be sure to specify link colors otherwise the user’s browser defaults will determine what color the links are which can make them unreadable.

 

Use keyword ‘anchor text’ for your links, this will help you with site optimisation, I also recommend using absolute links;

 

 (,

 

 As opposed to relative links;

 

 ().

Cross Browser Compatibility

 

There are many variants of browsers in use, and of these browsers there are many different versions being used, many users do not necessary take the time to upgrade to the latest versions. A good website will be required to render properly in all. Your website won’t be much use if it works well in Internet Explorer but is all over the place when viewed in firefox! It is also worth while remembering that the user may well be using a MAC, a Linux, a PDA and a mobile phone as well as the good old PC. As a guide you will need your website to work, and work well in;

 

Microsoft Internet Explorer (all versions)

Netscape

Firefox

Opera

Safari

 

 

Web Standards Compliant

 

In order for you website to reach its full potential, the most fundamental web technologies must be compatible with one another and allow any hardware and software used to access the website to work together. When a web site or web page is described as complying with web standards, it usually means that the site or page has valid or nearly valid HTML, CSS and JavaScript. The HTML should also meet accessibility guidelines.

Web Images

Remember the three click rule I mentioned? There is also the 10 second rule; Web surfers are increasingly intolerant of delays and research has show that most people will click away if a webpage takes longer than 10 seconds to load. Your websites images should be optimised i.e. their file sizes should be compressed as small in size as possible, without sacrificing picture quality. Your images should also be optimised to for keywords, the ALT tag should be used so people with graphics turned off and those using hand held devices know what the image is supposed to be, i.e. name your logo ‘logo’! 

 

Frames

 

Avoid using frames, frames can easily confuse readers who wish to print material on a page or bookmark a page for later reference or navigate using the browser’s “Forward” and “Back” buttons. Screen space also becomes an issue with frames; if you use frames to divide the browser screen, you will force many readers to scroll both horizontally and vertically to see the full contents of each frame.

 

The current consensus among Web design and usability experts is that frames should be used only in the rare instances when their limited advantages clearly outweigh the many problems they can cause.

Web Content

 

Content is king! Not just plenty of it mind, your content needs to be informative and keyword rich. You want the visitor to see you as a valuable information resource. People use the internet to find information. Whether you are selling a product or service you must provide valuable information to the visitor or they will click away and find a website that gives them what they what they want. Good content within your site will help your page rank, search engine placement and inbound links – if you a proven to proved good quality content , the likelihood is other sites will want to link to yours.

 

Summary

 

Good Web design is a combination of common sense, good website structure and internal linking, oh and a good designer is a must. Your site should be attractive and easy to use and most importantly, your website should provide a simple and easy navigational system to aid the user’s experience.

 



Leon

A Simple Guide to Designing Websites Profitable

Sunday, September 28th, 2008
opera browser
Visuals India asked:


His website is where your business resides - it’s like the headquarters of a company offline.

So it is important for good practice web design principles to achieve the maximum number of visitors.

Here are some tips that will help…

Use the navigation clear directions

Your site navigation menu should be simple and concise so that visitors know how to navigate your site without any confusion.

Reduce the number of images

It is a fact that the graphics of a website to look more attractive. However, there are still many users of internet dial-up, to take into account to reduce the size of its graphics, if possible. Large images that your site loads slowly and more often than not are just a waste of bandwidth.

If you find that graphics are essential to your website, you can optimize the use of an image editing program to meet a minimum file size.

There are also online services free to do it for you.

Here’s one:

http://www.tools.dynamicdrive.com/imageoptimizer

Keep your paragraphs of text in a reasonable time

Reading online is a different experience then reading offline print media. If a paragraph is too long, you must divide into separate parts so that the text blocks will be much easier to read.

Use lots of white space between your copies. This gives the eyes a rest, and keeps alert their readers.

Moreover, not make your source is too small, or people will have trouble reading his copy.

Make your website cross-browser compatible

If your site looks great in Internet Explorer but breaks horribly in Firefox and Opera, will lose out on a lot of potential visitors. Therefore, always check how your site looks in different browsers.

It’s better to have a set of browsers on their computer, instead of relying on online services.

You can also use the W3C’s validation, which can help your site with compatibility.

Here are two free online browser verification services: http://www.browsercam.com

http://www.anybrowser.com/siteviewer.html

Avoid using scripting languages on your site

Try to use scripting languages to handle or manipulate data on your site, not to create visual effects.

The scripts are not supported by all browsers, so some visitors might miss important information because your browser crashes.

Using templates website in the right way

Website templates are very affordable these days and you can save a lot of problems when you want to create a new design.

That is the point of using a template … to save time and effort. You can go a long way just by changing the title, the introduction of keywords, which in some new graphics and details and is already adequate.

Example: you find a good model that suits your gardening hobby site, except the original designer has created an image of the stamps in the header.

Then, you can find images of garden plants, or gardening tools, to replace the seals on his hobby site.

Just be aware of the use of templates too popular. If many people use the same template, your site will not appear unique and its credibility as b, companies will be tarnished.

The last thing you want your site is to make generic appear like your next-door neighbors.

I hope these tips will help you make better the performance of a website.

Web design India related articles and guide details Web design articles



Harvey

Table-less Web Designing: by Pseudo Technology

Saturday, September 27th, 2008
opera browser
Abhishek asked:


In the previous article “Basic Types and Requirements for Web Designing: PSEUDO TECHNOLOGY” we have discussed about the various techniques of web designing process. But we left the topic of table-less web designing because this topic in itself is a matter of discussion. The first thing you should be aware is that this site is not built using these techniques. The Web Design site on About (and all About sites) is built using tables, and until browsers that support CSS Positioning are more widely used, will be for the foreseeable future. The most important function of table-less web designs is the fact that it greatly facilitates the improvement of accessibility. However they face a bit of difficulty as browser support is minimal.

Browser Support:

CSS Positioning (CSS-P) is the only way to create standards based Web pages using XHTML. Why? Because XHTML requires that tables only be used to define tabular data, and not be used for layout. The problem is, until recently, most browsers only had sketchy support of CSS-P. But now, the following browsers and versions, have minimal to good support of CSS-P, among others:

•    Microsoft Internet Explorer 6

•    Microsoft Internet Explorer 5

•    Netscape Navigator 7

•    Netscape Navigator 6

•    Opera 6

•    Opera 5

•    Mozilla 1

•    Konqueror 3

•    Konqueror 2

Rethinking How You Build a Page:

When you build a site using tables, you have to think in a “tabular” format. In other words, you’re thinking in terms of cells and rows and columns. And your Web pages will reflect that. When you move to a CSS-P web designing, you’ll start thinking of your pages in terms of the content.

For example, the page for this article can be considered to have five content parts:

1.    The header

this is where my photo is, the top banner ad, and basic navigation.

2.    The left navigation

this is the left side of the page, with the subjects and essentials.

3.    The right navigation

this is where the tower ads and other information is.

4.    The content

the text of this article.

5.    The footer

the bottom navigation, copyright information, lower banner ad, and so on.

Rather than putting those elements in a table, I can use the

tag to define the different portions of the content, and then use CSS-P to place the content elements on the page. For the sake of this article, I’m going to pretend there are just three columns on the page, and ignore the header and footer.

Identifying Your Sections

Once you’ve defined the different content areas of your site, you need to write them in your HTML. While you can, generally, place your sections in any order, it’s a good idea to place first items you’d like less advanced browsers to see first.

For my three column layout, I’m going to have three sections:

1.leftnavigation 

2. rightnavigation

3. content

These will be defined using div tags with the id attribute. Remember, when you use the id attribute, you need to have a unique name for each id.

1.



2.



3.



Positioning

This is the fun part. Using CSS you can define the position for your id’ed divs. Store your position information in a style call like this:

#content { }  Content within a div tag will take up as much space as it can, namely 100% of the width of the current location, or the page. So, to affect the location of a section without forcing it to a fixed width, you can change the padding or the margin elements. For this layout, I set the two navigation columns to fixed widths and then set their position absolute, so that they wouldn’t be impacted by where they are found in the HTML.  While the page won’t look wonderful in non-CSS-P browsers, as you can see, it is possible to define how your page will look without any table tags.

The term web designing simply refers to fine art of designing websites that are available on the World Wide Web and are used consistently by individuals. Designers are a very significant part of developing a website as they are responsible for providing color to the external appearance of the website. Therefore, they are vital in providing a lasting impression upon the user, enhancing the popularity of the site. There are various factors and methods that need to be borne in mind when it comes to web designing a website. Websites are filled with written content as well as images and they need to conform to certain forms like JPEG, PNG, GIF and HTML, XHTML etc for written content. One of the methods of designing is known as table-less web design.



Marvin

Practical Web Designing Basics

Friday, August 29th, 2008
opera browser
Anantait asked:


The following are the key aspects which would help you practically craft a web design that would deliver results in terms of your audience visibility.

Part 1: The Unavoidables

 

Definition of a good Web site: A site that delivers quality and eshaustive information for its target audience and does so with elegance and style.

 

The rule of “Keep it Simple, Sober” is tried and tested, but it’s not a be-all end-all of Web design. Gamers, for example, expect a busy page with a lot of sophisticated graphics, flash effects, and the like. The usual understated page with the off-white background and the typical menu of links sedately trundling down the left side of the display leaves this audience cold; obviously the people who designed this Website aren’t on their wavelength — these guys like plenty of whizz-bang in the pages they visit.

On the other hand, when a middle aged lady goes on the Web to hunt down some nice crockery for kitchen, she isn’t going to want jazzy Flash effects, purple-on-black color styles, and a raft of animated graphics doing gymnastics in front of her rheumy old eyes. She’s been known to take a stick to the monitor to make it all stop. Corporate users expect something that might not necessarily be “buttoned-down,” but certainly something solid and professional that reflects positively on their business and compares well with the competition. Personal home pages want an emphasis on the personal — the site should reflect the interests and personality of the owner.

 

Attract Your Audience – Visually

 

The key here is to know who is going to be using your page, and to design with their needs and desires in mind. The KISS rule generally holds good in most cases. If you don’t need something — a frame, an animated graphic, a Flash animation, a fancy DHTML effect, don’t use it. After all you don’t want an uninteresting page full of unbroken blocks of text with a dull color scheme and dreary graphics won’t attract anyone’s attention. Use everything moderately. Keep your audience in mind and design your site accordingly.

Every image that moves or blinks draws your visitors’ attention to itself. Be sure that it doesn’t distract them from your message. Whatever your site’s reason for being, you want to portray an image that conveys what your site is all about as well as the feelings you want to implant in your audience. It’s no coincidence that most financial sites use design and graphical tactics to give a feeling of safety and stability. No matter what the stock market does, this site won’t have its feathers ruffled. In contrast, the ultra-hyper site design of the Nickelodeon and Cartoon Network sites appeal to their sugared-up audience of pre-teens and teenagers; you can’t overstimulate that crowd. A site selling luxurious designer ware isn’t going to use the same design scheme as a site selling automobile spares! One will go for a colourful shades in the design, while the other will use a rough-and tough looking design scheme.

A good Web designer will be able to design all four sites, and others as well. Don’t forget, if you’re designing a Website for a corporation or business, that they very likely have trademarks, logos, color themes, and other elements that will need to be included in your design scheme. Colour speaks volumes about your company even before the surfer reads your content of the web site.

 

Appealing to Multiple Audiences

 

If you’re trying to design a page that will appeal to both the middle aged ones and their hyperactive, TV& Gamestation addicted grandsons and granddaughters, then you’re going to have to make some compromises that could possibly alienate both audiences. You may want to consider refining your site to appeal to a narrower audience, or you may even choose to mount separate pages with different design approach for different audiences. In this case, you might do well to produce an introductory, or “doorway,” page with links to the “whizz-bang” and the “sedate” pages — the content might essentially be the same, but the design style would be dramatically different.

 

Connections Options

 

And don’t forget what your audience uses to access your site. Not everyone has a broadband or T1 connection; most of the world still limps along with slow dial-up connections, or must flounder around the Net through a maze of network connections. These folks appreciate your limiting your usage of big, slow-loading graphics, or at the least, providing thumbnails that automatically load and allow them to click for a bigger (and slower-loading) display. Remember, .JPG graphics are generally bigger than either .GIFs or .PNGs (Flash animations, surprisingly enough, load fairly quickly considering their complexity, but they can slow down a page, particularly one accessed over a dial-up connection). Complex table structures can take a while to load, too, especially if they’re loaded with graphics. Slow servers cause slow downloads; if your provider can’t get your site up to speed, switch to someone who can.

Design for the World Wide Web is the smart balancing act between the graphic “wow” and the real-time “now.”

“Elegance” is a favorite term to describe good, clean Web design, but what it actually means is up to the interpretation of the designer and the site user. It actuallu should mean using a decent design, with well-chosen colors and graphical choices that don’t stress the eye, but instead induce the visitor to relax and enjoy the content. It’s the difference between being wooed over a candlelight dinner and being juggled in the overloaded elevator!

 

What type of HTML Should You Choose?

 

Every Web page conforms to a version of HTML (or XHTML, or even XML, though we’re not going into those here), and is determined by the DOCTYPE (document type) code. The line:

 

at the top of your page (above the initial tag) covers your bases in most cases. It supports many of the elements of the latest version of HTML, 4.01 Strict, supports style sheets for the most part, but also supports most deprecated or no longer current HTML elements, frames, link targets, and other attributes not allowed in by-the book HTML 4.01. This document type also keeps older browsers such as Netscape 4.x in the game. If you’re designing to the latest HTML standards and/or using sophisticated style sheets, then this doctype:

 

“http://www.w3.org/TR/html4/strict.dtd”>

should be used, but be aware that a lot of older browsers won’t display your page properly. Neither can you use frames unless you use the “frameset” version of this doctype. Note, too, that the “transitional” DOCTYPE I cite doesn’t include the URL of a DTD, or document type declaration. This is because using URLs in a DOCTYPE element sends some browsers, including IE into Strict mode, defeating the purpose of the “transitional” DOCTYPE.

Of course, you could just slide bare-cheeked on the ice and use no doctype in your pages at all (just use the tag), but that’s not a good solution. That leaves the individual’s browser to choose how to display the page, and while most browsers will cope just fine with the situation, some will ***. Besides, you need to get into the habit of using a DOCTYPE element. If you don’t know a DOCTYPE from a typewriter, use the “transitional” doctype at the beginning of this section. If you know about the various doctypes, or if you’re coding in XHTML, then make your own choice. The decision to use the “transitional” doctype is safe and conservative, but it’s certainly not an up-to-date choice. If you want to ensure that your Web page is ready for modern browsing and will be compliant with current and upcoming Web standards, you’ll need to learn about CSS (Cascading Style Sheets), HTML 4.01, and XHTML.

Note: You can visit the W3C Validator to check your document for compliance with W3C standards, or use Dave Raggett’s acclaimed HTML Tidy program, now an open-source project.

 

Browser Compatibility

 

During the initial days when the web was still a tabu among the users the novice Web developers designed the pages with Netscape for Windows in mind; as that was by far the most popular browser in use, designing the site for Netscape/PC users was “good enough” to satisfy the majority of users, and never mind the rest. Nowadays the same lot of designers make their pages for Windows and Internet Explorer, for the same reasons. This is where they lack in approach.

Millions of Windows users still employ Netscape (or the open-source Mozilla). Many others use Opera. Some AOL users are still trundling along with their out-of-date AOL browsers, and some hard-core folks still swear by Lynx, the text-only browser (there’s also the surprisingly large contingent of users who keep graphics switched off and read only text). Then, there’s WebTV to be reckoned with. And there are differences between the Mac browsers and the Windows browsers of the same name, not to mention the Mac browsers Cyberdog, OmniWeb, Chimera, iCab, and others. There are the browsers for Linux such as Konqueror, Opera for Linux, Mozilla for Linux, and others. According to the Browser Archive at Evolt, there are well over 100 browsers out there being used by someone and many of them are obsolete now. Why should the Web designer care? Because your page won’t display the same from one browser to the next. The more plugged-in designer uses one method or another, either client-side or server-side, to detect what browser his/her visitor is using, and “tailors” the code they send to that particular browser. But if you don’t want or can’t do something so slick, what can you do to meet the needs of your various visitors with their options of browsers?

Basically, the best thing to do is to be aware of the HTML tags and other features and protocols that one browser will support and others won’t, and avoid them whenever possible: the infamous “marquee” and “blink” tags come to mind, as do iFrames, layers, JavaScript, style sheets, plug-ins, DHTML, and others. Some of these, such as “blink” tags and layers, are long out-of-date; others such as DHTML and JavaScript are quite current. If you do use something that is browser-specific, choose a function that isn’t critical to your visitors’ ability to view your site: an example is the neat color schemes for the horizontal and vertical scrollbars that IE provides for. Netscape users will just get the plain-Jane grey bars, but it doesn’t hurt them to not have the colored scrollbars — it doesn’t affect the way your site presents its message and handles its content.read more

For more articles Go Here

 

 



Ralph

Ecommerce Web Development – the Importance of Getting it Right!

Wednesday, August 6th, 2008
opera browser
Sanjeev Pandey asked:


Online shopping, at its best describes the revolutionary developments in and around our world. Time-is considered the most valuable of all and finding an alternative to save the same, can attract lot many potential customers.

How do you get started with the online venture and to reap its maximum benefit?

The answer is simple - get the basic things of your eCommerce website right! But, this is certainly easy said than done. But right implementation of the basics of eCommerce web development can get things straight for you.

Following are some of the basic important things which you should consider of utmost importance while building an eCommerce website.

1.Make your navigation user friendly: People using your website would love to stick around your website if they find it easy to use and easy to navigate. One would find it strange but it is the truth that- the visitors to an eCommerce websites are, for the most part, window shoppers, accidental browsers or some curious onlookers. It’s the duty of your online shopping websites and its featured contents to draw the curiosity and interest of such visitors and make them a possible buyer. Your website should be designed in such a manner that, any visitors visiting it for the first time should find it informative and a good learning experience. This can pave way for possible change of such visitors turning into a potential customer.

2.Make the content of your website- keywords and key phrase rich. Keywords and Key phrases are the words or common phrases you would have probably used in your searches through search engines. To make it simpler, this article is intended to have the keyword ‘eCommerce web development, and the possible key phrase could be the keywords combined with the phrase ‘ importance of getting it right’. But take care not to overfill your website content with just the keywords and key phrases. Meaningless overuse of these, just to get the ranks in the search engine listing can volley back with further consequences. Your visitors might find the content uninteresting, and your business might never actually prosper as you had imagined of.

3.Cross browser compatibility: Misconception such as the only existence of browser – which being the Internet explorer, is quite popular among the starters. There are over 100 different Internet browsers, firefox and opera being some of the top competitors of IE. Hence make your website cross browser compatible.

4.Effective use of images and videos: Image can best provide the opportunity to the customers to decide for themselves; if they want that product or not? For any eCommerce website, image description of the products is a pre-requisite parameter. You can further refine the experience of the visitors through Videos as well. But, just a word of caution, too much usage of heavy images and videos can increase the load time of your website. Hence, don’t forget to get the images or videos compressed or rather say optimized, before uploading it to your websites.

5.Enable browsers to remove narrowing down options: When a user narrow down their search for a particular product in a particular category, and all of sudden he feels to get back to earlier pages. Providing them with options to comeback to those pages without repetitive “back button” can enhance the visitors experience to your website. Hence provide them the option to easily remove the navigation selection as directed by your website, to a rather independent selection scheme.

These were some of the basics which you need to keep in mind while building your own eCommerce website for a successful online venture.



Denise

Designing for Accessibility

Tuesday, July 8th, 2008
opera browser
Ian Loveland asked:


Would you deliberately build a website that you knew would be unreadable by three quarters of your customers? Of course not! And yet, it happens - and there’s a good chance that, without realising it, you have, too. Here’s our guide to making sure your website is seen by everyone.

The whole point of making a website, the whole point of publishing it on the Internet under your domain name, is so that people will read it, right? It’s just common sense that you’d want to make it easy for your visitors to read your site. And yet most companies make websites which contain defects:

* Defects which make it hard for visitors to find the site at all,

* Defects make it difficult for visitors to get to the information they’re looking for, and

* Defects make it impossible for visitors even to read the information when they find it!

Sounds stupid? It happens all the time! Take a look at these common errors, and see how many of them are in your website.

Fixed-width layouts

You’ve seen websites where the content appears in a band in the centre of the browser window? If you expand the size of the window, the content stays in the middle. Nick James has a website like this. Peter Jones goes even further - he even lets you set the colour and position of the background!

So: what’s the problem?

Small screens: The website designer has no idea what size screen the visitors are using. If the content won’t fit, then either the stuff on the edges won’t be seen at all, or else the user will have to keep scrolling backwards and forwards to read each line of text.

Who uses “small” screens?

Laptop screens, though they’re better than they were, tend to have limited resolution.

Some services offer web surfing on TV. TV resolution is only as good as the very earliest, VGA computers.

It’s becoming common for people to surf using a phone or PDA. Their screens are very limited!

Large text: Nearly all web browsers provide a facility to change the size of the text. It’s really intended for partially-sighted users, but phone and PDA users with tiny, matchbox-sized screens find it very useful as well.

Many users, either on desktop computers or on PDAs, set the text size much bigger than the graphics. A fixed-width layout - at best - will squeeze the enlarged text into a narrow column. At worst, the whole screen can fall to bits!

Large screens: It’s not so serious, nor so obvious, but fixed-width layouts also inconvenience visitors with good-quality screens. They’ve got large screens so they can see more! If your website is squeezed into a narrow column, most of the visitor’s extra-large screen is blank - there’s no more webpage being shown.

He wants to see more. You’re showing him less! Do the math!

How can you check?

* Different browsers have different facilities. The more you have, the more checks you can do:

o If you’re using Internet Explorer, you can change the text size. See what happens to the page. You can also zoom the whole page in and out, to get an idea of what happens on very large or very small screens.

o If you’re using Firefox, then you can adjust the text size almost without limit.

o If you’re using Opera, then you can’t change the size of the text, but there is a great tool for simulating a small-screen device.

* Look at the website using a phone or a PDA.

Graphics and Flash

In order to give the graphic designer complete control of the user’s experience, some websites are designed to be nothing more than graphics - there’s barely any actual text there at all! Sometimes it’s done as a series of image files assembled together on the page, and sometimes all the graphics are inside a Flash file.

There’s no doubt, some of these websites look spectacular. Look at Coke’s Happiness Factory for an example.

So: what’s the problem?

* They’re not usable. The webpage looks like a videogame. The controls don’t look like controls, they move around the screen, and they don’t work in obvious ways.

* They’re not controllable. If you re-size the browser, the content doesn’t resize. It’s useless on small screens or for partially-sighted users.

* They’re not fast enough. You have to download the entire website before you can see anything at all. (Normal websites build up the screen as their parts are loaded). Most users expect to be able to see a website in less than three seconds.

* They’re not search-engine friendly. Search engines read text. They can’t read graphics or animations. Nothing in a graphics website will ever be indexed by a search engine

Flash-based websites aren’t all bad! if the content you’re showing is inherently graphical, or animated (or, indeed, is depicting a videogame), then Flash is entirely appropriate for it.

But, understand that those aren’t conventional websites. Conventional considerations of search-engine friendliness and user accessibility and such like don’t apply to them.

The problems appear when what should be conventional websites are built out of Flash, then the owners wonder why their websites aren’t generating any traffic.

How can you check?

* Switch off the images and plug-ins in your browser. Whatever is left on the screen is the real content.

Non-anchors

Normal webpage programming provides a perfectly good way to make something happen. It’s called the anchor. When you see something underlined like this, and the mouse pointer turns into a hand when it moves over it, and something changes when you click it - that’s an anchor.

But some web programmers want to be a bit clever, so they fake their anchors. They write special code to make something which isn’t an anchor behave pretty much like an anchor - the underline, the little hand, the something happening when you click it. Like this. Looks just the same, doesn’t it?

So: what’s the problem?

* Search engines don’t understand them. Search engines use anchors to find their way to your website, and around it. But if the anchors on your page are these tricky, pretend anchors, the search engines won’t understand them, and so won’t be able to read your site.

* Keyboards don’t understand them. If the visitor is using a phone or a TV which doesn’t have a mouse, he has to move from anchor to anchor using the cursor keys or tab keys. Even laptop users often find it easier to use the keyboard than to use the glide-pad. But the anchor selector only works on real anchors, not on pretend ones.

* Page readers don’t understand them. It’s not just blind users who have their web pages read to them People often listen to webpages while they’re travelling. Page readers make a little noise to indicate an anchor. They don’t do anything about a pretend anchor.

* Browsers don’t always understand them. Non-anchors rely on JavaScript to work. Not all browsers allow JavaScript, and those that do allow users to switch it off for security reasons. No Javascript: no pretend anchors.

How can you check?

* Don’t use your mouse to navigate around a page - try using the tab key instead. (Shift-tab to move backwards)

* Switch off “Javascript” or “Scripts” in your browser, and see if the website still works.

Relying on colour.

Did you know..? In some parts of the world, 1 male in 8 is affected by some form of colour blindness?

It’s perfectly natural to use colour to make your website look more attractive, or to provide information (such as box-outs or animated menu items). But what looks great on one display may end up looking terrible on another. If you rely on colour to say something, you may end up saying nothing!

Bright primary colours can be as bad as gentle pastels.

What’s the problem?

* People can be colour blind. Some of your viewers will have some form of colour blindness. Red/green signals are a common convention which causes particular trouble for the colour blind.

* Screens are often colour blind. Liquid crystal displays are notoriously inaccurate at reproducing colour - what appears on the screen is often quite different to what you asked for. They get worse in bright light.

* Paper is usually colour blind. Most people print on black-and-white laser printers. There’s no colour reproduction at all. The printout is the most durable reproduction of your webpages!

How can you check?

* The easiest way to check a web page is to print it out on a monochrome printer. (Don’t cheat - remove any printer-specific CSS from the page)

* There are more sophisticated tools available at the Colorblind Web Page Filter. It will show you your website in various kinds of simulated colour-blindness.

* Finally, you can get special boxes which you plug in-line with your monitor to make it simulate various kinds of colour-blindness.

Rambling

Most writers are paid by the word. Skilled copywriters are taught “The more you tell, the more you sell”. So the best writers you can hire will give you long essays, covering every angle and objection, so that your website can convert the maximum number of visitors.

So: what’s the problem?

* Too many words are bad. People read from screens slower than they do from paper. Text on screens needs to be bigger than text on paper in order to be legible. Screens are generally smaller than paper. All these, taken together, means that a computer screen is a somewhat inefficient way to acquire information! Hardly anybody will read all the stuff your writer has written.

* Too many thoughts are bad. Generally, visitors to your site are not reading literature. They’re trying to find some piece of information, probably to help them to take a decision. If they can’t see right away that the page tells them what they need to know, they’ll look for another page.

Search engines think the same way! If they read your page, and can figure out what the page is about, then they’ll be able to recommend it. If the page rambles from one thought to the next, the search engine will never understand what the page is saying, so won’t ever show it.

How can you check?

* Look at every page in your website. Can you write a 50-word summary of the page? Can you write a 10-word title?

* Use Webtool to find out what search engines think your website is about.

* Monitor whether your visitors prefer to read from the screen, or print your pages to paper.

Not saying enough.

The opposite problem to rambling is not saying enough. You see them all over the web:

* Catalogue pages which show the name of a product, a catalogue number, and a “Buy now” button;

* News pages which list only titles.

So: what’s the problem?

‘Nuff said.

Summary

It’s not difficult to put together a simple website. Making a website with “Wow-factor” is slightly more difficult. But to build a real, industrial-strength website - and still keep it looking great and working seamlessly - that takes experience and expertise.

So, how can you tell whether a web developer is a beginner, a “getting better”, or a battle-hardened expert? Just look at the websites they’ve developed, and apply the tests in this article. You’ll soon be able to tell which is which!



Vincent

Perth Website Design - in Tune With the Times

Monday, June 30th, 2008
opera browser
Clint Jhonson asked:


It has not been too long since the new web browser Google Chrome hit the shelves and designers all over the world, including Perth Website Design Companies have had to change the way they design and develop websites to suit the requirements for this latest in Browsers. It is already quite demanding to design and develop a website to be compatible with the many browsers that we have available such as Internet Explorer, Mozilla Firefox, Opera and Safari but now they have added Google Chrome to the mix and many Web Design Perth Companies will need to design websites to cater for users of this browser.

A professional Perth Website Design Company will already have all the four main browsers available to test their design code, but they are now considering adding the relatively new Google Chrome to the list of browsers to make the website designs browser compatible with as many browsers as possible. This new browser is still in its beta version so there are still plenty of bugs to sort out but it has been noted that Google Chrome has the potential to get into the top browsers list. Many Perth Website Design Companies have been cautious about catering to this new browser because it is still only a beta release and many Mozilla Firefox (or Ice Weasel) users have been reluctant to make the switch.

Taking all these browsers into consideration for Web Design Perth projects adds time and cost to the project. Designers always try to resolve browser issues and lack of support in some areas. As Google Chrome has been off to a slow start and is still in beta form, many Perth Web Design Companies are thinking if it is really worth the time and trouble to develop website compatible with Google Chrome, besides the other well-established browsers. This is the question that is on every ones lips in the web design community online and it is not likely to get answered just yet. In the meantime, projects are developed as per normal and any extra browser considerations are not adapted to unless specified. As a rule of thumb for all designers, not just the Web Design Perth teams, it is always better to maximize accessibility to ensure no potential customer is left out.

If you are looking for Perth Website Design Company and want your project to consider all the top browsers you should certainly consider specifying the inclusion of Google Chrome testing in your web design project. This can mean potential customers will not be confronted with a poor quality website or even a broken website or layout when they try to access your website with Google Chrome. This means more customers using Google Chrome visiting your website and more great first impressions. The last thing you need from a Web Design Perth Company is a website that fails to display properly when accessed through different browsers. This can damage the way users see your website and your company and provide negative impressions of your professionalism and quality.

For the very best Perth Website Design results your website needs to cater for everyone or at least as many people as possible so do not be afraid to ask for multi-browser testing in your next design package to ensure you get the most out of your website. If you are unfamiliar with the different browsers out there as you are a devoted Internet Explorer user it may surprise you to learn that your business could benefit from a multi-browser website design as one of the most popular browsers today is Mozilla Firefox. In terms of up to date support, features and security Mozilla Firefox is one of the best browsers available so make sure you get a Web Design Perth Company to develop your projects that includes Mozilla, Opera, Safari and perhaps even Google Chrome usability testing.



Sherry

The Good, the Bad and the Ugly in Flash Web Design

Thursday, June 12th, 2008
opera browser
Scot Crone asked:


Flash website design has been very popular with web designers in recent years, and as the Adobe® Flash format becomes more and more popular, we can safely assume that more and more Flash websites will pepper the internet in the years to come.  However, many people argue that Flash based websites are slow loading, bloated and to many, frankly unnecessary. What then is the real truth about Flash based web design?  Let’s consider these points…

 

The Good:

 

Flash means a more interactive experience…

 

Flash’s ability to involve the web user opens up an array of exciting possibilities for web developers.  For many years now web programmers and website designers have used Flash to create interactive features… these featured have ranged from engaging feedback forms to enthralling Flash based interactive movies and games. This next level of interactivity has caused web visitors to come back to Flash based sites for more, time and time again.

 

No cross browser compatibility worries…

 

With Flash, cross browser compatibility issues are a distant CSS coding memory.  No more sleepless nights over how certain browsers will interpret your HTML code, as regular non flash based websites usually display differently across Internet Explorer, Firefox and Opera etc.  After positioning your site elements in Flash, they should always stay exactly where you positioned them and look the same in every browser so long as the user has installed the latest version of Flash Player.

 

Communicate with better expression via flash animation…

 

With Flash, you can make use of animation features to get your message across in a more attractive and more efficient way.  Because Flash is vector based (with smaller file sizes) it is considered to be a more lightweight option for animation versus real movie files which are raster based and are much larger in file size.

 

The Bad and the ugly:

 

Adobe® Flash Player Plug-in is required to view Flash content…

 

In order to view Flash content on the web users have to download the Flash player in advance (before they can view Flash movies).  Therefore immediately upon creating Flash based web content you potentially limit your visitor range.  Not everyone is actively willing to download the Flash player just to view your Flash website or Flash based content.  You may also have to put in a link to the Get Flash’ plug-in page if the user does not have the Flash player installed to give users the option to go to the download page.

 

Search engine optimisation (SEO) concerns…

 

If you present your website’s text in Flash, some search engines may not be able to read it and may be unable to index your content.  Apparently Google and others can now read some Flash based text content but do you really want to make it harder for them to do so?  As far as seo is concerned Flash based web design could be a big no no.  If you want to rank well in search engines Flash may not be the best way to go as ultimately there could be less traffic coming to your website.

 

Slow load times…

 

Web users have to wait longer for Flash content to load compared to regular text and images, this could potentially cause some visitors to lose their patience and lead to them hitting their browser’s back button.  Sad to say, the longer your Flash website takes to load, the more you could be risking losing precious visitors.

 

To conclude…

 

Use Flash only when absolutely necessary… for example, when you need more interactivity and more active animation.  A more balanced approach would be to use a blend of Flash and HTML or simply HTML if your site is only required to present simple graphical and textual information.

 



Luis

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