-
Recent Posts
Recent Comments
Categories
Tags
Aardvark audio Bob Gelman BZ Smith Chrome Dave Winer Del McCoury development empathy FCC feeds flying hyperlinks hyperlocal Jing Joe Craven Julius Genachowski learning marketing Marshall Rosenberg mastery Michelle Shelton mp3 music needs net neutrality Network Sierra Nonviolent Communication Pablo Casals podcast practicing pubsubhubbub reader real time web revival roi rss rssCloud screencast Sharon Crost Strawberry Tuolumne Tweets twitter videoLicense
Blog under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 License
About Greg
As a web developer for more than 15 years, I find my attention increasingly drawn to the intersection of computers, the Internet and communications, especially social media. On this blog, I indulge my interest in these and several other topics. I hope you find them interesting too. Read on...-
Subscribe by RSS
Subscribe by Email
-
Twitter Stream- New blog post: Google consolidates privacy policies and tools (are you listening, Facebook?). http://bit.ly/9njT3A about 23 hours ago from TweetDeck
- Can visitors can see your entire web page? Load it up in "Browser Size", from Google Labs, to find out. http://bit.ly/53Wel3 06:22:32 PM September 01, 2010 from TweetDeck
- Check out the "The Wilderness Downtown", built in HTML 5 (Chrome or Safari required). Pretty amazing. http://bit.ly/cRV3WQ 10:33:31 PM August 30, 2010 from TweetDeck
- Made my head hurt trying to figure out what the Facebook Like button really does. I now have them on http://webdancers.com. 10:43:02 PM August 29, 2010 from TweetDeck
- First hand account of how an acquisition fell apart. Not something that gets published every day. http://bit.ly/bgdKaC 08:50:03 PM August 27, 2010 from TweetDeck
- Powered byWordPress Twitter Widget Pro
Rediscovering The Simple Web
In a concise 27 pages, Skellie asks and answers the following question:
The remainder of the e-book is devoted to each of these four elements: Gripping, resonating, interacting and talking. Each section includes concrete suggestions for things to try on your website or blog and strategies for evaluating a site you may already have.
The Simple Web philosophy suggests that we simplify our websites by doing and adding things only if they help us to achieve our goals. Skellie suggests that we qualify every action or element of our sites as either +1 or -1. It either grips or distracts, resonates or bores, interacts or preaches, talks or is apathetic. There is little or no neutral ground.
Try evaluating your current site, or the one you are about to build, in this light and you may find it becoming much smaller, simpler and more effective.
Perfection (in design) is achieved not when there is nothing more to add, but rather when there is nothing more to take away.
-Antoine de Saint-Exupéry
Cross-posted on webdancers.com.