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Resources
for designers of information retrieval systems:
Screen
Design - The visual design of the screen can impact usability.
Color, font, the use of images, and layout of screen elements are essential
design components.
Searching
and Navigation - Ease of navigation and search/browsing options
are critical components of usability.
Metadata
and Description - Good metadata and site description will help
users find the appropriate website.
Information
Structures and Organization - How information is organized and
categorized shapes access. For systems with an underlying searchable database,
the structure of the database itself will determine the outcome of searches.
Usability
Testing - Includes resources on how to evaluate sites and on testing
for usability.
Web
typography overview
An online guide to designing user-friendly web sites by Patrick Lynch
and Sarah Horton. Contains much practical advice on site design, page
layout, and graphics.
Design
Lab
These articles written by Dmitry Kirsanov address the aesthetics of design
essentials such as color, fonts, shape, texture, dynamism, the principles
of using artwork, photography, and animation, plus some more specific
issues such as web site navigation and logo design.
Webmonkey's
Web Design 101
Jim Frew on the basics of web design (July 1997). Who is the audience?
What is the message?
IBM
Ease of Use Guidelines
Describes a user-centered design process for producing websites that are
user-friendly.
PixArt
Tutorials
Provides online tutorials to Dreamweaver, Photoshop, Painter, Corel, Illustrator,
Freehand, and Pre-Press applications.
Buttons
for webpages
A step-by-step tutorial explaining one way to make buttons in Photoshop.
Web
Developer's Virtual Library
Offers tutorials on Photoshop and Paint Shop Pro.
Webmonkey's
Crash Course on Photoshop
This tutorial, developed by Jim Frew, creative director of the Humboldt
Institute for Technological Studies, is delivered in six lessons: 1) Cropping,
changing mode, resizing, file formats; 2) Selection tools, filters; 3)
Text tool, layers, the rule of 51; 4) Merging graphics, the path tool;
5) Faking images - think lights and shadows; 6) Making illustrations (May
1998).
Webmonkey's
Image Editing 101
Jim Frew on how to create the best possible picture with the smallest
possible file size (October 1996).
CNET
Help's How-Tos for Photoshop
Provides links to tutorials from around the Web, including Webmonkey's
crash course listed above. Other tutorials include creating a transparent
image for the Web, managing color, and making an animated GIF.
Web
typography overview
From the Yale Style Manual.
Typographic
style concerns
Considerations specific to web legibility. From the Yale Style Manual.
Freeware
fonts
Microsoft's index lists dozens of freeware font foundries.
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The
Navigation and Usability Guide
Article by Jen Muehlbauer reviewing principles of good navigation design.
Navigation
in Web Applications
Hal Shubin, Interaction Design & Margaret M. Meehan, Text Matters
This paper discusses several common navigational problems and techniques
for avoiding them in designing Web applications. Although the focus is
on applications rather than on purely informational sites, these guidelines
can be used for designing most websites.
Spotlight
on Navigation Design
Links to sites which address designing for navigability.
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W3C
Metadata and Resource Description
Use this site to stay current on the latest developments in metadata protocols.
Dublin
Core Metadata Initiative
The Dublin Core is a metadata element set intended to facilitate discovery
of electronic resources. Originally conceived for author-generated description
of Web resources, it has attracted the attention of formal resource description
communities such as museums, libraries, government agencies, and commercial
organizations.
Links
to Metadata Web Pages
Links to the major organizations working on the development of metadata
standards for various communities on the Web.
SearchEngineWatch.com
Practical advice on using metadata tags as well as information about how
search engines work.
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Information
Structures and Organization
Putting
your Database on the Web
Norm Friesen, Academic Technologies for Learning, University of Alberta
This article will provide examples of how database information can be
integrated with web pages. It will explain the basic techniques that make
this integration possible, and will undertake an introductory-level comparative
evaluation of the competing products and solutions that allow you to put
your database on the web.
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BOBBY
Bobby is a web-based tool that analyzes web pages for their accessibility
to people with disabilities. CAST offers Bobby as a free public service
in order to further its mission to expand opportunities for people with
disabilities through the innovative uses of computer technology.
Children's
Software Revue
A set of criteria for evaluating the usability of software for children.
Criteria
for Evaluation of Internet Information Resources
A comprehensive list of criteria to use for evaluating websites compiled
by Alistair Smith, VUW Department of Library and Information Studies,
New Zealand. This is a "toolbox" of criteria that enable Internet information
sources to be evaluated for use in libraries, e.g. for inclusion in resource
guides, and helping users evaluate information found.
Information
Quality WWW Virtual Library: The Internet Guide to Construction of Quality
Online Resources
Dr T.Matthew Ciolek and Irena M. Goltz
This set of pages keeps track of online resources relevant for evaluation,
development and administration of high quality factual/scholarly networked
information systems.
Usable
Web
Usable Web is a collection of links about human factors, user interface
issues, and usable design specific to the World Wide Web. Value adds:
descriptions, multiple organizational schemes (by date, site, topic, popularity),
search engine queries to even more resources.
Useit.com
Jakob Nielsen, a writer and consultant on Web usability issues, maintains
this website which has bi-weekly articles on usability as well as links
to related sites at http://www.useit.com/hotlist/.
The
Usability Methods Toolbox
Information about many methods and techniques used in usability evaluation.
Compiled by James Hom.
Usability
Toolkit
Developed under the auspices of the Society for Technical Communication,
the Usability Toolkit is a collection of forms, checklists and other useful
documents for conducting usability tests and user interviews.
World
Wide Access: Accessible Web Design
Practical tips on improving usability compiled by the University of Washington.
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