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	<title>Articles&gt;Web Design&gt;Editing</title>	<link>http://tc.eserver.org/dir/Articles/Web-Design/Editing</link>
	<description>A listing of the most recently indexed works about Articles and Web Design and Editing in the field of technical communication.</description>
	<language>en-us</language>
	<copyright>Copyright (c) 2005-08 by the EServer. All rights reserved.</copyright>
	<managingEditor>tclib-editorial@eserver.org (TC Library Editorial Board)</managingEditor>
	<webMaster>webmaster@eserver.org (Geoffrey Sauer)</webMaster>
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		<title>Articles&gt;Web Design&gt;Editing</title>
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		<title>When Revision is Redesign</title>
		<link>http://tc.eserver.org/35836.html</link>
		<guid>http://tc.eserver.org/35836.html</guid>
		<description>This webtext for Inventio describes my response to Kairos&apos; invitation for &quot;re-envisioning,&quot; which I took as a provocation, a challenge to literally re-see and reimagine the visual and conceptual design of my argument. By highlighting some of the complexities of the design and redesign of one digital project, I hope to demonstrate the complicated relationship between seeing and design in envisioning and enacting argument, to make more visible the rhetorical and intellectual work of scholarship in digital media, and to argue by example for publishing scholarship about new media in new media.</description>
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		<title>Editing and Publishing</title>
		<link>http://tc.eserver.org/34212.html</link>
		<guid>http://tc.eserver.org/34212.html</guid>
		<description>Once the main text has been written, you edit it.  Editing means breaking text into sub-documents; pointing out connections to other texts; making sure the document as a whole is in good shape; adding indices and outlines.  Editing doesn&apos;t necessarily happen after the first text has been written - I mix those stages all the time - but it deserves to be thought of as an independent discipline, because the problems it deals with are different.  Most of what people do on the World Wide Web is really editing, not writing. </description>
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		<title>Appropriate Use of Alternative Text</title>
		<link>http://tc.eserver.org/32877.html</link>
		<guid>http://tc.eserver.org/32877.html</guid>
		<description>Adding alternative text for images is the first principle of web accessibility. It is also one of the most difficult to properly implement. The web is replete with images that have missing, incorrect, or poor alternative text. Like many things in web accessibility, determining appropriate, equivalent, alternative text is often a matter of personal interpretation. Through the use of examples, this article will present our experienced interpretation of appropriate use of alternative text.</description>
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		<title>Relative Sizing and Images</title>
		<link>http://tc.eserver.org/32908.html</link>
		<guid>http://tc.eserver.org/32908.html</guid>
		<description>Few people realize that with today&apos;s modern browsers, relative sizing can in fact be added to images as well as text elements on your web page. Making the image scale with the text may aid in accessibility, despite the degradation of quality.</description>
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		<title>Editing Web Pages: A Second Look</title>
		<link>http://tc.eserver.org/24202.html</link>
		<guid>http://tc.eserver.org/24202.html</guid>
		<description>How to edit Web pages--with revision tracking--using Microsoft Word.</description>
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		<title>Beyond Gutenberg</title>
		<link>http://tc.eserver.org/24015.html</link>
		<guid>http://tc.eserver.org/24015.html</guid>
		<description>Editing must change for the Web, but perhaps not so much as you think. In paper publishing, different documents require different rules and procedures: An annual report requires more editing and more attention to detail than an office memo. Similarly, not all Web documents are equal.</description>
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