Subject matter notwithstanding, the Mac OSX-esque artist scroll
loading on every single page (other than, it seems, the last two in
the nav) and then madly scrolling to land on LL Cool J seems like
overkill.
If I was going to use an effect like that, I would only use something
that intense when
/- is good. I also agree on as few clicks as possible.
What about an Ajax update. A live edit on the page much like the
titles and descriptions of Flickr photos. Display the number and
make it editable by clicking it.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
After years as a UI designer, IA and IxD practitioner, I've begun to
change my focus by doing an MA in Learning and Technology. I work in
post-sec now and like the notion of applying design to deeper
cognitive things than just selling stuff.
Anyway, good learning is about primarily three things,
I hear what you're saying and, no doubt, Drupal does some things very
well. Where I work, we've built a few standalone projects with it.
However, it also has some huge drawbacks when compared with something
like Wordpress for medium sized, discussion-based sites (blogs on
steroids, or even
Both are using javascript libraries, not java and not so much 'css-powered'
... although in the second case, the whole page gives the user an idea of
the horizontal scroll by virtue of the scrollbar, while the first does not
implement a scrollbar.
Both of these actually have similar approaches,
One further point, which frustrated me a lot upon a second look ...
the first one completely lacks the ability to navigate. Once you
start from the landing page, the javascript slider is hiding and
displaying divs as the user clicks the one prescribed link on each
page or div.
The problem with
I think those are good points Alexandra. I'd add that as new networks or
network-like tools like Twitter gain in popularity a new model of social
context emerges. One of discovery through social connections, as opposed to
being about social connections or employment and professional connections.
You also might point to anecdotal evidence that virtually every video site
on the web brings you to a player that puts playback control in the hands of
the user, YouTube, Vimeo - take your pick.
Also, some of the well-worn usability advice around the notion of not taking
control away from your
I agree and I'd also suggest that if you work in, or are studying deeper
cognitive activities like learning via technology mediated means, then this
is probably pretty important, too.
I don't have formal psychology training but am presently doing an MA in
Learning and Technology, while my
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James Wanless
email: ja...@wanless.info
web: http://james.wanless.info
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