Re: WWW long or short

Subject: Re: WWW long or short
From: Simon North <snorth -at- TEDOPRES -dot- NL>
Date: Fri, 27 Oct 1995 12:00:34 GMT

Think of your poor reader. There is nothing more annoying than having
to wait ages for a page to download - only to discover that it wasn't
interesting after all. So, my advice is keep it short and - contrary
to the current trend - don't put a major graphic at the top of the
page(s). Better still, offer the reader the option of a text only
version.

Personally, I try to avoid forcing the reader to use the scroll bar at
all. An index with links to the contents of the current page can be a
great help.

For brochures I think you might be on the wrong track.
Layout is (IMHO) an important factor in brochures - something you can
only loosely mimic in HTML (even 3.0). You should think about Acrobat PDF
files perhaps, the reader can then download a faithful image and view it
locally (and Netscape will be supporting PDF format soon - but then
they've promised Macromedia support ... then we'll start to fly).

Simon North, mailing from, but not for ...

--
_ _
_ _/_/_/_ _ _ _ _ _
/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/ TEDOPRES INTERNATIONAL BV
/_/_/ _ _ /_/_/
/_/_/ /_/_/ /_/_/ technical illustrations, advertising, publications
/_/_/ /_/_/_/_/_/ postbox 10165 5000 JD Tilburg The Netherlands
/_/_/ /_/_/_/_/_/ tel. +31 13 5424545 / fax. +31 13 5420260
/_/_/ ~ Internet: info -at- tedopres -dot- nl ~


Previous by Author: subscription
Next by Author: Style for Windows Help
Previous by Thread: (fwd) re: Demographics of Tech Writers
Next by Thread: Figs


What this post helpful? Share it with friends and colleagues:


Sponsored Ads