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16Nov/091

5 Must-read books for interactive content designers

Although the all mighty internet provides guides, tutorials and blogs galore; sometimes nothing beats a good book.  I've come across several great reads and thought I'd share them with the masses.  Some you may know, some you may have even read; but check out the list and seriously think about getting hold of these titles.

3Aug/090

Silverback – Guerrilla usabality testing [REVIEW]

Well here's a first for pretty usable, and hopefully not a last; a review of software built to improve the quality output of the web designer and/or web studio. Silverback is Mac only, so if you want to give it a try, upgrade your life and buy yourself a mac.

14May/094

25 Incredibly Useful Usability & Standards Checklists

Is your Web site primed for every possible viewer? How would you know if it was? The greatest thing about a usable web site that conforms to current web standards is that anyone and everyone is able to use it.

Ensuring your site is easily usable by your key demographic will ensure that everyone gets where they need to be, and sees what they need to see on your site, without unnecessary effort or excessive clicks.  Conforming to current web standards ensures that irrelevant of disability or user restrictions (running IE6 counts as both!) means that no ones left out; this is particularly important on sites that appeal to a completely open demographic, a local government website for example.

2May/093

Effective and Appropriate Pagination – a showcase

Pagination is the system by which the information on a newspaper, bookpage, manuscript, or otherwise handwritten, printed or displayed document is laid out.  In a strict sense of the word, it can mean the consecutive numbering to indicate the proper order of the pages, which was rarely found in documents pre-dating 1500, and only became common practice circa 1550, when it replaced foliation, which numbered only the front sides of folios. Pagination can also refer to the process of organizing information on web pages. For instance, threads on a bulletin board might be paginated such that 50 appear on each page. wikipedia

Pagination can be a minefield for a web designer.  Decisions need to be made whether pagination is actually needed or not; and if it is then whether to use numbers, or dates, or any other quantitative or sequential measure.  Once you've ironed out the details of exactly whats needed you then need to make it look good, flow with the sight and ultimately provide a functional navigation tool for your users.  Sounds easy huh?

3Apr/094

10 Persuasive web sites with fantastic usability

Aesthetics and usability are not mutually exclusive, and this list proves it.

I'm a designer that firmly believes that usability is integral to any design, but I also feel that aesthetics should never be sidelined for functionality; a careful balance of the two must be adopted, and this, I feel, is what makes a great web designer.  I hope this provides some inspiration and encourages usability, especially when designing beautifully sleek front ends that often disregard it completely.

It's important for me to note that when I describe a user friendly web site, I'm not necessarily talking about accessibility; however accessibility is factored into my decisions.