Archive for October 3rd, 2008
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You are browsing the archives of 2008 October 03.
I’ve been meaning to write a similar post to this, though The Guardian beat me to it.
A question. With services such as Flickr, Wordpress, and Blogspot that have a common language and format that most semi-literate internet users understand and can edit, do we need convoluted, hard-to-navigate flash(y) website design at all?
Flash sites can still be done well, though take the Guardian’s list of Architecture websites as examples (though I disagree with their take on Heneghan Peng). These sites as well as others include unnecessary introductions made up of flashing colours, lines that move and a small “skip intro” button that is hit more times than any other button on the site. We also have animation that chews time and, by the time it has loaded, the user ends up frustrated and moves on with haste. The content takes second place against the polished turd*.
A few points to think about;
Below is a small list of simple, easy to navigate websites for firms.
www.oma.eu - If only every Architecture firm had an AMO to help.
drew heath - Easy to navigate, good content, great loading times.
minifie nixon - Appears to be based on a simple, php-based content management system.
Websites are ever changing. More importantly, so is the online environment and the skill of the user. Bigger Internet institutions such as Wordpress have grasped the current climate well and given the user enough flexibility within the blogging template to create most configurations of web content with a basic knowledge of CSS. Couple this with a Flickr and You Tube account you can cut out the need for a domain at all. Pre-Web 2.0, hard to navigate, flash based, ephemeral web design needs to be addressed.