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What’s New in Navigation Bars?

July 9, 2009

The Internet seems to change almost daily. Trends that were popular a few months ago can become outdated almost overnight. Nowhere is this more true than when it comes to website design. With each new evolution, new standards emerge.

Navigation bars are one aspect of site design that seem to constantly change. So, what are the current trends?

When the web was still in its infancy, navigation bars took the form of a graphic interface and some were even Java-based. These types of navigation bars worked very well and are still fairly popular today.

However, as webmasters soon discovered, the function of a navigation bar played a large role in how deep visitors would travel into a particular website. Many web designers realize that simplicity is what visitors want in a website, which is why the current trend in navigation bars is gravitating toward using text links as opposed to the graphic interfaces or Java applications.

One of the most popular ways to navigate a website now is through the use of drop down menus. Drop down menus are popular because they offer superior functionality and ease of use while maintaining the integrity of the overall design.

Drop down menus are extremely easy for the average visitor to use and blend seamlessly into the website design. They also offer quick navigation of the entire site by being easy to access, yet still unobtrusive.

A growing trend is the use of mega menus. Mega menus are useful for navigating large websites that have multiple pages and sub-pages. Essentially, designers could create sitemaps with links to every page, but as sites become bigger - and more pages are added - these sitemaps become too big and too tough to navigate.

Another option would be for the designer to use dynamic drop-down menus or expanding menus, which would give readers access to any page on the site. However, the problem with these menus is that they can be tough to access, and since most require Java Script, some users will be left out in the dark.

Mega menus bridge the gap between simple menus and expanding menus. They’re easy to use and don’t suffer from the accessibility problems associated with some of the other navigation tools. Also, mega menus look good and can be seamlessly blended into virtually any site’s design. check out the navbar at http://www.webassist.com/

While your website can still function well using older style navigation bars, you might want to consider a switch in the near future. Your visitors will appreciate it.

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Good Website Design Is A Skill, But Is It Art?

May 4, 2009
Filed under:Web Site Design - Nina @ 12:53 pm

No one can deny that designing a nice looking, easy to use website takes great skill, but is the finished product a work of art?

It’s a shame, but so many website designers focus solely on whether or not a site looks good without thinking about whether it functions properly. People can debate whether or not a painting works or not, but the same can’t be said for a website - it either works as it should or it doesn’t. And if it doesn’t, then all of the pretty aesthetics can’t save it.

This is why the top-tier web designers become like artists when they design a site. They take their talents, and combine them with the tools of the trade, to create something beautiful that functions seamlessly. It’s this merging of design and function that captures what it really means to be an artist.

Think of it this way: A painter can paint a picture of a building in such a manner that it looks like a photograph. It might look pretty, but what purpose does it serve other than to say, “Look, how good I can paint.” However, when a painter creates a work like The Mona Lisa, which people still debate about to this day, the work becomes art.

The same is true for website design. The design should not only be attractive to the eye, but it should be something of value - something that works. Anyone can learn to mix paints and to put something on a canvas that has some aesthetic value, but it takes a true master to make something that goes deeper than a mere image.

And if you spent just a half hour scanning the various websites on the net, you can see that not everyone is capable of going deeper than mere aesthetics. There are plenty of websites that look just fine, but fail to function in harmony.

Fine art requires the viewer to look deeper into the work. The Mona Lisa causes people to scan every brush stroke to figure out what da Vinci was trying to say. Likewise, a person can look beyond the graphics of a website and go into the code, which is where much of the mastery takes place. Great websites are often like great symphonies in that one extra note (or piece of code) would cause the whole thing to fall apart. It’s that fine balance that separates the websites that just look good from the websites that are great.

There are websites that go beyond the merely functional and become elegant creations that deliver the perfect balance between beauty and functionality, and it’s these websites that can be truly considered works of art.

So, what is art?

Art is generally thought of as something that has an emotional appeal to the person who’s viewing it. Art is something that can make you think or inspire you, which means that virtually anything can be art to certain people because it’s very subjective.

However, there are many websites that could be classified as art because they make you stop what you’re doing and stare at the screen in order to take it all in. Of course, once you take in all of the visual appeal, the website still has to work as designed. That’s the mark of a true artist: the combination of the visual with the functional.

What many people fail to understand is that web design isn’t easy because so many people can pull up a pre-designed template, or use a WYSIWYG program to create a simple website. This isn’t art; it’s more like painting by numbers. By the same token, you can’t learn a few codes, type them in and expect everything to come together. Good web design is a skill just like being an architect is a skill. Sure, you can draw a picture of a building, but without knowing how it all fits together - how to keep the structure from collapsing – all you have is a picture and not much else.

There are so many technologies that a web designer has to learn like HTML, (necessary, but won’t help you with the visual appeal) CSS, PHP, Javascript, SQL and many more. These are akin to an artist learning oils, acrylics, watercolors, gouache, as well as all of the various brushes, pens and pencils. You have to master them all if you want to develop something truly great.

Web design is an art because the designer must possess the skills of the visual and the technical, and must mesh those skills to create something that can be used (and appreciated) by everyone who comes by.

When you’re looking to have your website designed, don’t go for style over substance. There’s too much riding on how well your site functions for you not to hire a real website artist.

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Low Cost Web Site Design : Really In - Web 2.0

September 11, 2006
Filed under:Web designer, Web 2.0, Web Site Design - Nina @ 7:24 am

As we’ve discussed, dynamic sites are in, and static sites are way, way out. To review, a static website is one that is much like a catalog, while a dynamic site ideally lends itself to much more updating and interaction.

Then, there’s a site that is compatible with the Web 2.0 style of marketing.

Before you start getting upset about yet another way in which you’ll have to overhaul your website :) let me be the first to tell you that joining the Web 2.0 evolution is not nearly that complicated. First, let’s talk about what Web 2.0 actually is.

Wikipedia defines it as follows:

Web 2.0 is a term often applied to a perceived ongoing transition of the World Wide Web from a collection of websites to a full-fledged computing platform serving web applications to end users. Ultimately Web 2.0 services are expected to replace desktop computing applications for many purposes.

Don’t let this scare you though - it doesn’t mean your site has to have all the fixings of an office productivity suite in order for it to stay relevant. What it does mean, is that your site needs to catch up to the message that comes out of this movement. That message is that the Web isn’t just a place to passively look up things - it’s a place to participate, a place to BE.

Even if you have a site that is strictly corporate in nature, you can use many of the tools used in Web 2.0 Marketing in order to spread the message of your site deeply into niches that previously may have seemed hard to reach.

For example. you can start an RSS feed, a podcast, an internal or external blog, or use trackback and tagging in your online press releases. Doing so will help you reach a more web-savvy, affluent crowd of clients - important if you’re selling a product online, or to a crowd that does its research online, like people in the market for a home. Marketing your site with Web 2.0 methods doesn’t mean you need to change your site around.

It means you need to update your strategy.

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