blue zone


 
Some Links for Page Design

IBM Ease of Use. Some simple do's and don'ts.

Yale CAIM on Page Design. Comprehensive in its way, but a bit prescriptive.

Pay Attention to the 'Design' of Text

Nielsen on writing for the web.

Here is a thought provoking article from the on-line magazine Lighthouse on the Web, by David Walker. It should prompt you to think about the way you write the text for your web pages, and bring to your attention the importance of 'text design' as a key web skill. You might find some other articles useful.

The Undiscovered Craft of Web Writing

Consider for a moment the Web's most under-explored craft - Web writing. It seems incredible that so few people have taken the time to examine how the medium of today's Web might be affecting the written word, and how the written word might best adapt to the new medium. Yet in all the many books on Web design, writing for the Web usually rates only a cursory mention.

Literary theorists have long predicted that hypertext would dramatically alter writing. But their predictions have born little resemblance to the Web that has actually grown up in the past decade. Back in the early days of the Web, around 1994, pioneer hypertext theorists were predicting that the arrival of hypertext would change the very substance of writing. George Landow foretold the rise of hypertext fiction, in which storytelling would lose its "linearity", stories might have dozens of possible outcomes and the readers would play a more active part in their own experience. Instead, the Web hypertext flood since then has shown just how doggedly readers insist on the domination of the author and the linear story.

So now, without non-linear hypertext or even that much multimedia content, what exactly do we have? Certainly, we have a lot of words. But they're a different type of words, being absorbed in a very different fashion than printed material is absorbed. These words are still telling stories. But rather than changing the form of information, the Web has instead changed the scale of information. That change was not well-predicted, and has not been well addressed.

Our three-year flood of Web texts has brought us more than 100 million Web pages. They could be any length, yet most of them run no longer than the average newspaper story. The longer ones are often chopped up into pieces (sometimes to ensure we see more ads). We take in much more textual information, but we take it in much smaller pieces.

How small have our texts become? Some of the Web's most valuable information comes in slices no more than a paragraph long, in the precious illumination of a well-written review of a well-selected site described on the pages of a good Web catalogue such as Britannica.com or the Google directory. In today's flood of Web information, we seek concision more than ever before. And as knowledge splinters into ten thousand tiny specialisations, we seek glossaries, overviews, "help screens", the ability to fit the small facts into a wider picture.

As readers, we search for concision not just because we can have so much but because we struggle to get much at all. The difficulties of screen reading often force readers to print items out rather than absorb them as pixels. And the dynamic environment of the Web encourages visitors to forget what they saw just minutes earlier, making the fight for attention becomes even tougher. As Web usability expert Jakob Neilsen has pointed out, Web page visitors don't read: they scan, searching for nuggets of useful, credible knowledge amid the info-torrent. The Web writer must cater to that behaviour. Perhaps most difficult of all, the Web writer faces the task of linking together pieces of prose, each on different screens, and turning them into a coherent whole. As Neilsen neatly puts it, "writing is a user interface". Though the Web's all-powerful technologists would rather not say so, writing is in fact the most powerful interface the medium has. It is also the most misunderstood element of the giant Web hypertext system we have now created.

So we go on placing more and more value on forms of writing that have traditionally been seen as the preserve of newspaper sub-editors, advertising copywriters and software engineers. Yet while we value it more and more, we're reluctant to discuss it even as a craft, let alone an art. Neilsen, a computer scientist with a talent for sharp-pointed prose, is the exemplar; his site at www.useit.com is a Web must-visit. But Neilsen is also a rarity. After more than half a decade of the hypertext boom, writing is mostly failing to rise to the challenge of the Web.

Copyright © David Walker 1996-2001

 
 
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