Fontographer
According to Typographica, Fontographer, a font creation and editor package from Macromedia has just been updated for Mac.
This is it’s first update in nine years! That’s pretty big news. I will definitely be checking this out.
Posts from November, 2005
According to Typographica, Fontographer, a font creation and editor package from Macromedia has just been updated for Mac.
This is it’s first update in nine years! That’s pretty big news. I will definitely be checking this out.
After the atrocity that was the Disney Store UK redesign, a fresh wave of articles on professionalism have popped up. Each are very important reads for those of us in the Web development community.
Accessibilty, The Gloves Come Off (Interview with Andy Clarke)
There are now so many web sites, blogs or publications devoted to helping people learn standards and accessible techniques that there are now no excuses not to work with semantic code or CSS. Those people still delivering nested table layout, spacer gifs or ignoring accessibility can no longer call themselves web professionals.
Molly Holzschlag: Web Standards and the New Web Professionalism
Between the blogs and various sites, lists, wikis, meetups, geek dinners, and conferences there simply is no excuse to not reach out and help each other understand the difficulties, nuances, and challenges of our craft.
A Web Professional Can Never Stop Learning
Some will call me an elitist for saying that. But think about it. Why should web professionals not be required to know their craft? I find that attitude – which is held by many in the industry and by many more outside of it – insulting to those of us who work hard every day to keep up with current best practices.
Ours is a constantly changing media. Even the “Gurus” in this field can never sit back atop their lofty mountain, or holed up in their ivory tower and think that they now know all the answers. There are still so many questions without answers, so many problems without solutions. Ours trade is still in its infant stages, and is evolving rapidly.
We must keep up, or go the way of the dinosaur. In our field, that means reverting from professional to ametuer, as so many Web design shops have already done.
It’s not about the “cool” way of building Web sites, it’s about the right way. The best way. Take a look at my reading list for some good places to start.
Professional, Web, Design, Standards
I am becoming someone important.
My dreams are being realized.
I have cracked the top 500 in a google search for matt. In fact I’m around entry 187.
This is a proud day for me.
google, search, matt, sea
How many of you are reading this in an RSS aggregator of some sort? Come on, raise your hands. Yah, me to. But that’s cause we’re all geeks, right? I’m willing to wager that you have a blog with an RSS feed as well, right? I thought so.
I was pondering recently how well RSS has been spreading. Are people actually using it? Last year, Scobel and a few others talked about the slow adoption of RSS, even among geeks and Roy Osherove even came up with a few reasons why “Really Simple Syndication” isn’t really simple. Essentially, it’s a usability nightmare:
Here are the steps that he says you need to take to use RSS feeds:
- Find out what RSS means
- Find a news reader
- Download and install it
- Find sites that give out RSS feeds
I agree with him for the most part, and I’ll add #5, Subscribe to a Feed
Find out what RSS means
I can’t tell you how many times I’ve been asked to explain what RSS is to someone. It’s not easy to do, even to Internet savvy users. Here’s about the best I’ve been able to do:
“Well, RSS is a method of getting the word out about your Web site by creating this file that is essentially a “what’s new” list of stuff on your Web site. Someone then uses a program called an “RSS Aggregator” or a “News aggregator” to “Subscribe” to that feed (oh ya, a feed is what the RSS file is called…), and the aggregator program tells you every time that site is updated, kind of like an e-mail program…”
This usually brings on a look of extreme confusion and frustration that can (sometimes) be quelled by a few well-placed clarifying remarks that vary based on who I’m talking to, but as you can see, I have a hard time explaining it. If any of you out there have found a simpler explanation, please let me know.
But then think about how we present our feeds on our Web sites. Tiny orange buttons that say “RSS” or “XML” or “Syndicate” or “Subscribe” on them. When you click on this button (which an uniformed user would probably only do out of sheer curiosity) you get A RAW XML FILE AHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH! That is unless you went to the trouble of applying some XSL transforms to your feed. Don’t worry, I haven’t done that either.
A recent study done by Yahoo (pdf) shows that only 12% of Internet users are actually aware of what this little orange button could possibly mean. That is, only 12% of Internet users are actually aware RSS exists.
Find a news reader / Download and Install it.
Another usability hurdle (and a very large one at that) is that once someone is really convinced that RSS is a useful thing, one must go to great lengths to locate, download, install, and configure (or perhaps in the case of online aggregator programs, sign up for an account) the aggregator program.
Find sites that offer RSS feeds / Subscribe to that feed
This is not as large a hurdle as the last one, but it is yet another usability hurdle in the widespread use of RSS Feeds. Most major Web sites, nearly all blogs, and close to every content driven site worth its salt offer RSS feeds, but subscribing to these feeds can be a headache. In short, there is no “one click” way of subscribing to a feed (though the “feed:” protocol shows some promise). Usually the process involves clicking on the little orange RSS button, wincing at the raw XML file, copying the URL from the address bar, and pasting it into your feed aggregator program, and clicking “Subscribe”; a painful process at best, complete and utter roadblock at worst.
Bloglines (my aggregator of choice) has a fairly nice “Subscribe with bloglines” bookmarklet. Yahoo Toolbar combined with My Yahoo has some pretty good options for subscribing to a feed. Firefox and Safari have implemented various RSS “one click” subscription options. Though this isn’t as useful when you work on multiple computers as I do. Mozilla has integrated RSS subscription into Thunderbird, it’s e-mail client. These are great steps forward towards ”one click” usefulness for RSS feeds, but more needs to be done.
Perhaps this is why of the 12% of Internet users that are even aware of RSS feeds, only 4% of users actually USE RSS feeds.
What to do? What to do?
4% adoption of such a brilliant technology is a shocker to me. The ability to have the Web come to you, rather than you having to go to the Web changed my life. (Okay, that was a little melodramatic). However, one thing we should NOT do is despair that not everyone uses a brand new (couple years old) technology. It is catching on.
The 4% number is a little misleading. The statistic is that 4% of Internet users KNOWINGLY use RSS. Another statistic that we should be aware of is that at least 27% of Internet users consume RSS syndicated content. These show up on personalized start pages, news sites aggregating other news sources, etc.
Increasing the consumption of RSS syndicated content will require a three-pronged attack. Firstly, we will need to educate and raise awareness about the technology. We will need to learn to explain to someone very simply what RSS and how it can benefit them. Secondly, we will have to make our RSS feeds easier to use. We will need to figure out another means of linking to our RSS feeds besides showing people our naked XML files. And thirdly, those of us who do know how to use RSS need to continue to make use of it in our projects. Implementing small-scale aggregators into our sites to show relevant blog postings and news topics. Showing our flickr photos via it’s RSS feed, or del.icio.us links in the same manner on our personal sites are a small step forward in this process.
Don’t believe that RSS can really change the world…
Let’s not give up yet. This is an infantile technology that has great potential beyond just telling the world what is new on your site (podcasting anyone?) We are going to need to learn utilize it in a less geeky and more idiot-proof “don’t make me think or work” style way.
RSS, adoption, usability, technology, web, future
I was recently pointed to the Godbit project by my Bloglines notifier (;-)). I’m glad I went. Created by Nathan Smith of SonSpring (a part of the 9rules network)**. Godbit has a mission that I can get on board with heart and soul:
The purpose of this site is to help the Church catch up with the rest of the world in adherance to standards given by the World Wide Web Consortium, the governing body of best-practices on the Internet. The majority of Christian web design agencies are using outmoded methods of coding to create websites that the rest of the world would scoff at. Basically, they are stuck in the 1990’s.
So I got on board. Nathan is graciously posting my article on Why Framesets are Bad there, and is allowing me to be a regular contributer. I hope to help Godbit in working towards its mission. Thanks Nathan!
**penalty: 15 yards for excessive name-dropping.
Matt is currently Lead Designer (and front-end developer) for Weblogs Inc (AOL), Husband, Father, Musician, sometimes contributer at Godbit.com, and Jesus' friend.
Web Design
Design and market your own professional-looking website with easy-to-use tools.