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“Web Pages That Suck” Byung Lee ENGL 393 Technical Writing (Picture from “Son of Web Pages That Suck” by Vincent Flanders with Dean Peters) Where you learn good Web design by looking at bad Web design. http://www.webpagesthatsuck.com/home.html Importance of Web Design: • Used to be OK to slap any old thing up there and be done with it. • Now, people look at a poorly designed site and ask, "Do we want to do business with them?“ • Upside magazine phrased it best when it discussed the importance of marketing: "Word of mouth, frequency of press appearances, Web site quality and the frequency and quality of advertisements all serve to create the image of a 'real company.‘ " Where you learn good Web design by looking at bad Web design. http://www.webpagesthatsuck.com/home.html Learn By Bad Examples: • If people are exposed to bad web page design they will be less likely to use these techniques in the pages they create. • People often commit the same mistakes over and over ... By pointing out these mistakes, and being told that they are mistakes, people can avoid them when people design the web pages. Where you learn good Web design by looking at bad Web design. http://www.webpagesthatsuck.com/home.html Bad Example 1: Rainbow-Colored Divider • This used to be cool back in the summer of 1996, but it quickly became overused, pretentious, and cliché when everyone starts to use it. http://www.webpagesthatsuck.com/badtext.htm • Black backgrounds are a very, very popular cliché. It is recommended that black is not the way to go unless you are a pro. • Multiple animated GIF images, Blinking text, multiple font sizes, multiple colored text, JavaScript status bar messages, rainbow-colored divider bars, and etc are all big mistakes. Where you learn good Web design by looking at bad Web design. http://www.webpagesthatsuck.com/home.html Bad Example 2: Any Java Program Ever Written • Takes too long for an applet to load. • May compromise the system’s security. • Not much of an entertainment. • For people who disable Java in their web browsers, and for people with visual impairments who use text to speech converters that cannot parse Java output, the home page is usually a dead-end for any information going nowhere. Where you learn good Web design by looking at bad Web design. http://www.webpagesthatsuck.com/home.html Example 3: Needless JavaScript • The image changes when you roll the mouse over an image. http://webpagesthatsuck.com/vincentflandersdotcom/ • Need to Have – Does adding the OnMouseOver JavaScript enhance my page? • Usually doesn’t. – Needless waste of bandwidth Where you learn good Web design by looking at bad Web design. http://www.webpagesthatsuck.com/home.html Example 4: Sliding Menu (DHTML) • Just because you can create a menu bar like the Sliding Menu, doesn’t mean you should create one. http://www.webpagesthatsuck.com/slidingmenu.html • Same Question: What does it add to the page? – Confusion – Needed the sign of arrow to figure out – Too much trouble for the technique to be any good Where you learn good Web design by looking at bad Web design. http://www.webpagesthatsuck.com/home.html Example 5: Too Many Things Wrong • Crammed many lousy techniques into one page. http://www.webpagesthatsuck.com/wpts1/index_slide.html - Sliding Curtain Effect - Popup windows - Sound files - Animated GIFs - Blinking text - “Click here” button - Different colored buttons - Black borders on a white background Where you learn good Web design by looking at bad Web design. http://www.webpagesthatsuck.com/home.html Example 6: Too Much Text • Common mistake for beginners to cram every piece of information on one page. http://www.webpagesthatsuck.com/bozo.htm • A single web page can go on and on forever. • Tempting to make long pages because HTML lets you create internal anchors using the “#” symbol. • Better to break the document up of try to condense it using categories instead of making a long page. Where you learn good Web design by looking at bad Web design. http://www.webpagesthatsuck.com/home.html So What Is a Good-Looking and Effective Web Site? • Web design isn't about matters of taste, it's about communicating and making money. Where you learn good Web design by looking at bad Web design. http://www.webpagesthatsuck.com/home.html GOOD-LOOKING AND EFFECTIVE WEB SITE (Continued) Web Design Isn’t Sex • No foreplay such as splash pages, • Flash pages, or whatever silliness to put them “in the mood.” To put it bluntly, the Web is “Wham. Bam. Thank you Ma’am”—Get right to the point “Give me your information NOW. Sell me your product NOW.” Where you learn good Web design by looking at bad Web design. http://www.webpagesthatsuck.com/home.html GOOD-LOOKING AND EFFECTIVE WEB SITE (Continued) The Most Dreadful Complaints You Want To Get. • It’s too easy to find what I’m • • • looking for on your site. Your site loads too quickly. Your site is too easy to navigate. Your site is too informative. Where you learn good Web design by looking at bad Web design. http://www.webpagesthatsuck.com/home.html GOOD-LOOKING AND EFFECTIVE WEB SITE (Continued) Follow The Leader. • More your site uses the traits found on successful • • • sites, the more likely you are to be successful. The design should "resemble" the designs find on successful commercial sites. Do not steal or copy the design but look for elements in common. Most successful business sites don't use background images, don't have black backgrounds, excessive animations, moving cursors, sound files, and other silly techniques. Where you learn good Web design by looking at bad Web design. http://www.webpagesthatsuck.com/home.html PEACE OUT, DUDE. Reference: 1. “Web Pages That Suck” by Vincent Flanders. http://www.webpagesthatsuck.com/home.html 2. Son of Web Pages That Suck by Vincent Flanders with Dean Peters.