[Sigia-l] seeking rules
Anne Hjortshoj
anne at optical.mindstorm.com
Tue Apr 30 16:17:52 EDT 2002
Here's one: it's always more efficient to have everything on one page.
"Everything" can equal:
-Search
-Text
-Steps in a workflow
-Forms
etc.
I've spent some time lately gently persuading clients and developers that
this isn't the case.
-Anne
On Tue, 30 Apr 2002, Heller, David wrote:
> Christina here are a few of mine:
> 1. Local Navigation should be on the left; Global Navigation should be on
> the top
> 2. Links should be blue & underlined
> 3. Animated gifs are bad
> 4. Flash is bad
> 5. Nested tables are bad
> 6. Users won't wait for pages to download
> 7. Users won't horizontally scroll
> 8. Users max out their windows
> 9. Users use web sites differently from GUI applications
> 10. Keep it Simple
>
> Ok, that's all I can come up w/. Ziya is right w/ the Jakob site ... He's
> the man w/ the real list.
>
> --dave
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Christina Wodtke [mailto:cwodtke at eleganthack.com]
> Sent: Tuesday, April 30, 2002 11:49 AM
> To: sigia-l at asis.org
> Subject: [Sigia-l] seeking rules
>
>
> Hey all,
>
> I'm seeking "rules of web design" that are absolute and erroneous in their
> over-simplicity. Such as "users don't read" "users don't scroll" "Have only
> seven links on a page" and so on.
>
> Anyone have any of these (anecdotes not necessary, but always welcome for
> entertainment value)
>
> thanks!
>
>
> christina wodtke
> http://www.boxesandarrows.com
>
> Content Management Symposium, Chicago O'Hare Marriott, June 28 - 30. See
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