Topics: Culture: Industry
Smart tags and their ilk. Surviving downturns and booms. Corporate news that changes things. (39 articles)
Web 3.0
by Jeffrey Zeldman
Issue 210January 16, 2006
Web 2.0 is a fresh-faced starlet on the intertwingled longtail to the disruptive experience of tomorrow. Web 3.0 thinks you are so 2005.
When You Are Your Own Client, Who Are You Going To Make Fun Of At The Bar?
by Jim Coudal
Issue 201August 22, 2005
Should your blog have a business? Jim Coudal shares insights into the adventure of transitioning from client services to product creation.
Everything I Need To Know About Web Design I Learned Watching Oz
by Brian Alvey
Issue 169February 02, 2004
Making it as a web designer is like staying alive in the slammer. So before you sharpen your Photoshop skills or crack open that new book on crafting more effective customer experiences, you’d be well advised to catch a few reruns of HBO’s Oz. ALA system designer Brian Alvey points out the parallels between a successful career in web design and the popular prison drama.
How to Save Web Accessibility from Itself
by Joe Clark
Issue 163November 14, 2003
An upcoming revision to the Web Accessibility Guidelines is in danger of becoming unrealistically divorced from real-world web development, yielding guidelines that are at once too vague and too specific. Your expertise and input can help create realistic guidelines that work.
Accessibility, Web Standards, and Authoring Tools
by Christopher Schmitt
Issue 141March 22, 2002
With the advent of more compliant web browsers, the quest for standards shifts to the tools pros use to build sites. Christopher Schmitt spoke with Adobe and Macromedia for the low-down on web standards, accessibility, and authoring tools.
Information vs. Experience
by Emmanuel King Turner
Issue 125October 26, 2001
The conflict between presentation and structure reveals two views of the web. Which one’s winning?
Patents, Royalties, and Web Standards
by Jeffrey Zeldman
Issue 122October 05, 2001
This week there is only one web story that matters. The W3C has written a patent policy that opens the door to royalty payments on web standards.
Global Treaty Could Transform the Web
by Dennis A. Mahoney
Issue 119August 17, 2001
Mahoney is boiling mad over a proposed global treaty that would turn our worldwide web into a mishmash of regional Intranets, each attending to whatever local regulation allows.
CSS Talking Points: Selling Clients on Web Standards
by Greg Kise
Issue 116July 06, 2001
Selling your clients on standards-compliant design doesn’t have to hurt. Kise’s four-point CSS Selling Plan helps the medicine go down.
Nipping Client Silliness in the Bud
by Robin (roblimo) Miller
Issue 116July 06, 2001
Slashdot’s Robin (Roblimo) Miller could write a book about web clients’ mistakes. In fact, he’s writing it now – but he needs your help.
All the Access Money Can Buy
by Joe Clark
Issue 115July 22, 2001
Just when you think online multimedia will never be truly access, someone proves you wrong. In BMW Films, Clark sees a tantalizing glimpse of a better web.
Much Ado About Smart Tags
by Chris Kaminski
Issue 115July 22, 2001
Microsoft’s proprietary Smart Tags: Boon or bane? Kaminski digs deep beneath the hype and paranoia in an extensive assessment of what Microsoft hath wrought.
The Client Did It: A WWW Whodunit
by Robbie Shepherd
Issue 114July 15, 2001
Shepherd on the fine art of telling bad clients to buzz off.
Cheaper Over Better: Why Web Clients Settle for Less
by Adam Schumacher
Issue 114July 15, 2001
Schumacher investigates why clients hire bad web designers—and what good web designers can do about it.
“Forgiving” Browsers Considered Harmful
by J. David Eisenberg
Issue 107April 27, 2001
By hiding the need for structure that the web will require as it moves toward XHTML and XML, “forgiving” web browsers have helped breed a world of structural markup illiterates. Eisenberg examines the damage done.
The Road to Dystopia
by Chris Kaminski
Issue 105April 13, 2001
Now that greed, pride, and stupidity have wrecked the web economy, how’s a semi-idealistic web developer supposed to make a living? Chris Kaminski hitches a ride down the road to dystopia.
Down By Law
by Carrie Bickner
Issue 104April 06, 2001
A U.S. law scheduled to take effect on the 20th of this month will force libraries and schools to censor Internet access or lose their funding. If enacted, the law will restrict free speech and punish the poorest of the poor. Librarian and web developer Carrie Bickner explores the politics of censorship and the digital divide.
A Failure to Communicate
by George Olsen
Issue 103March 30, 2001
It’s ironic that, as professionals dedicated to clear communication, information architects and user interface designers are having such trouble communicating with each other. Information designer George Olsen digs up the roots of communication breakdown and explores the three aspects of web design.
Web Designer and Proud of It
by Chris MacGregor
Issue 100April 02, 2001
Building respect for the profession.
To Hell With Bad Browsers
by Jeffrey Zeldman
Issue 99February 16, 2001
In a year or two, all sites will be designed with standards that separate structure from presentation (or they will be built with Flash 7). We can watch our skills grow obsolete, or start learning standards-based techniques. In fact, since the latest versions of IE, Navigator, and Opera already support many web standards, if we are willing to let go of the notion that backward compatibility is a virtue, we can stop making excuses and start using these standards now. At ALA, beginning with Issue No. 99, we’ve done just that. Join us.
This HTML Kills: Thoughts on Web Accessibility
by Jim Byrne
Issue 98October 20, 2003
Activist Jim Byrne sounds off on the importance of web accessibility, and the difficulty of doing it right.
One Boy’s Life: Surviving the Dotcom Blitz
by Nick Finck
Issue 95January 19, 2001
A boy, a job, and a floundering economy. Nick Finck tells his personal story of hirings and firings on the cusp of the dotcom crunch.
Survivor! (How Your Peers are Coping With the Dotcom Crisis)
by Jeffrey Zeldman
Issue 95January 19, 2001
It’s ugly out there, but how bad is it, really? We asked 40 colleagues to share how they were coping (or not) with the layoffs and business failures plaguing our industry.
Rolling the Start-up Dice (A Survival Guide)
by Marlene Bruce
Issue 92August 13, 2005
So you want to work for an Internet start-up company. Bruce and Moyer show you the ropes.
A Case for Web Storytelling
by Curt Cloninger
Issue 92August 13, 2005
In our attention to style and technology, we often overlook a vital element in the web design mix: narrative voice.
The Web is Like Canada
by Joe Clark
Issue 84October 10, 2000
Those who “get” the web create it. Those who do not get the web are put in charge. Joe Clark presents a vision for defending our web against their worst ideas.
Indie Exposure: It's All About You
by Julia Hayden
Issue 82September 29, 2000
Reports of the death of online content have been greatly exaggerated. Julia Hayden finds that independent content production is alive and well.
Experience Design
by Bob Jacobson
Issue 77August 18, 2000
It’s time for web designers to peek over the cubicle and start sharing ideas with their peers in related design disciplines. Jacobson suggests one way to do that in this overview of the emerging Experience Design paradigm.
Dr. Strangeglobe: Or How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love The W3C.
by Erika Meyer
Issue 76August 11, 2000
Can the mysterious Dr Strangeglobe save the WWWorld from a conspiracy to contaminate our precious liquid layouts? Erika Meyer takes a non-standard look at the W3C in this charming yet educational spoof of the Kubrick classic.
Usability experts are from Mars, graphic designers are from Venus
by Curt Cloninger
Issue 74July 28, 2000
Usability mavens like Jakob Nielsen think the web is an ill-used database. Graphic designers like Kioken think it is a fledgling multimedia platform. Could both groups be right? New ALA author Curt Cloninger explains why usability experts are from Mars, graphic designers are from Venus. This one’s a hottie.
Fame Fatale
by Rich Robinson
Issue 72July 14, 2000
When did weblogs stop filtering the web and begin cluttering it instead? Rich Robinson on digital glut and creative solutions.
Why Are You Here?
by Scott Jason Cohen
Issue 72July 14, 2000
Whether we’re designing experimental sites or keeping an online diary, we go to the web in search of meaning. Will we find it? Or will we build it ourselves?
Rated XHTML
by Peter-Paul Koch
Issue 69June 23, 2000
The W3C’s XHTML language is intended to bridge the web’s past (HTML) and future (XML). Shall we cross this bridge, now that we’ve come to it? Or is XHTML more trouble than it’s worth? Peter-Paul Koch puts forth the pros and cons.
Bridging the Gap
by Robert Miller
Issue 66June 02, 2000
How can we work together if we don’t understand each other? Systems administrator Robert Miller describes the view from his side of the cubicle, and attempts to break down the barriers between “creative” and systems professionals.
Digiglut.com
by Bob Jacobson
Issue 62May 05, 2000
There is just too much stuff out there. Web surfing has turned to web surfeit, as web users and independent content site authors are buried alive in a sea of ever-more-useless crap. Bob Jacobson sifts through the wreckage.
Time to Close the Web?
by Alan Herrell
Issue 61April 28, 2000
Focusing on presentation at the expense of content, and invasive money-making schemes at the expense of everything else, designers must take some of the blame for the trashing of the web. Herrell wonders if it’s time to call it a day and close up shop.
Why Gecko Matters: What Netscape's Upcoming Browser Will Mean to the Web
by Jeffrey Zeldman
Issue 56March 24, 2000
Netscape is about to unleash its new browser, built around the Gecko rendering engine. Theoretically the first completely standards-compliant web browser, Gecko enters a world where most people use IE5 (which is not completely standards-compliant). Is Netscape’s effort too little, too late? Or is it the beginning of a new and better way to create websites? Zeldman articulates The Web Standards Project’s position and explains what Netscape’s browser will mean to the web.
Clickthru Is Evil II
by Alan Herrell
Issue 55February 25, 2000
Ten years ago, Tim Berners-Lee invented the web. Five years ago, advertisers started discovering it. Now they are poised to wreck it. Double-Click’s poison cookie has Alan Herrell foaming at the mouth as he explains why Clickthru is Evil.
Fear of Style Sheets
by Jeffrey Zeldman
Issue 8March 12, 1999
“No-fault CSS” can help you work around frightened clients, buggy software, and readers who still love last year’s browser. In Part One of a series, Zeldman walks you through the fear.
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