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1. #20624 "About Us" -- Presenting Information About an Organization on Its Website Study participants searched websites for background information ranging from company history to management biographies and contact details. Their success rate was 70%, leaving much room for usability improvements in the 'About Us' designs. Nielsen, Jakob. Alertbox (2003). Articles>Web Design>Usability>Writing 2. #25641 Adolescent Diary Weblogs and the Unseen Audience This paper first situates adolescent diary weblogs and their implied audiences and then applies a typology of audiences for personal narrative performance to a sample of diary weblog posts to ascertain if the typology fits the implied audiences present in the weblog text. Scheidt, Lois Ann. Indiana University (2005). Articles>Writing>Web Design>Blogging 3. #21801 Blogger's primary advantage is its simplicity--if you accept the default settings and host on BlogSpot, you can be up and running within five minutes. Once you have your blog, you'll find it's just as easy to customize it. Doctorow, Cory, Rael Dornfest, J. Scott Johnson, Shelley Powers, Benjamin Trott and Mena G. Trott. O'Reilly and Associates (1998). Articles>Web Design>Writing>Blogging 4. #25430 In some sense, weblogs sum up what's so great about the Internet. Like fanzine editors before them, weblog editors embrace a topic or theme and run with it. Weblogs are a great indicator of what's happening on the Internet and within the web community. Barrett, Cameron. Camworld (2005). Articles>Web Design>Writing>Blogging 5. #28228 Applying Web 2.0 Technologies to Technical Documentation This article is based on my presentation at the Institute of Scientific and Technical Communicators' annual conference in October, 2006. Every now and then, there is a change in the value of what technical authors deliver. These are moments when organisations pay attention to technical documentation. This is because they recognise that these changes mean they can create something that will be of real value to the business and to their customers. In recent years, there have been three "waves of interestingness". The first wave was the introduction of Windows Help (WinHelp). The second major wave was the introduction of the Internet and intranets. This was a time when organisations looked at how they could transfer large amounts of information from paper to online. They were faced with issues such as how users could access and understand all this information easily - issues that technical communicators deal with on a day-to-day basis. I believe we're just about to approach the new wave, which we have called "Tech Writing 2.0". Pratt, Ellis. Cherryleaf (2006). Articles>Web Design>Documentation>Technical Writing 6. #24134 Site visitors crave the sense that someone is there, within and behind your Web pages, your emails and newsletters. Usborne, Nick. ClickZ (2001). Articles>Web Design>Writing 7. #25438 The Art of Blogging, Part 1: Overview, Definitions, Uses, and Implications Innovations build on existing perceptions and structures - at least until the new ideas are fully manifested. Then, the innovation discards the shackles of the old model and stands on its own merits and strengths. The development of video is often used to support this phenomenon. Video was initially used only to tape existing live stage performances - a new concept built on the perceptional structure of the existing. True innovation in this medium did not occur until someone recognized the uniqueness of video, and the limitations of live stage shows. Siemens, George. elearnspace (2002). Articles>Web Design>Writing>Blogging 8. #25439 The Art of Blogging, Part 2: Getting Started, "How To", Tools, Resources The best way to learn to blog is to blog. Fortunately, getting started is fairly simple. Three main options exist: hosted, remote server, and desktop. Siemens, George. elearnspace (2002). Articles>Web Design>Writing>Blogging 9. #22738 Although blogs are generally linked with business, personal, and entertainment sites, Eugene Volokh, a professor of law at the University of California at Los Angeles, thinks that blogs are evolving into a major academic tool for universities. Members of the academic community have discovered that blogs offer the classroom a cheap, sociable, and fast way for everyone in the class to actively participate in discussion. Lisson, Kristin. Techniques (2003). Articles>Web Design>Writing>Blogging 10. #26440 You can keep copy from turning zombie by starting with a clear idea of exactly what you want to say. It's tempting to just start writing, but this approach can leave your pages vulnerable to zombification, because it's easier to sound like you’re making sense than to actually make sense. Outlines can serve as an effective vaccine against living death. Kissane, Erin. List Apart, A (2005). Articles>Web Design>Writing 11. #24589 Freedom of expression is not ruling the blogosphere, because insecure bloggers will block your attempt to post comments, or even read their blog, should they decide you are "too controversial" or "too different from me". Opinionated blogs are the worst culprits of cowardly post blocking. Streight, Steven. Blogger.com (2004). Articles>Web Design>Writing>Blogging 12. #25435 Battlecat Then, Battlecat Now: Temporal Shifts, Hyperlinking and Database Subjectivities Like all media forms, the blog is not transparent. The technological code of the software contains affordances that filter and, in part, determine the constitution of the private/public Self represented in any weblog. And so, what kind of Self (or Selves) are made possible or enabled by typical blogging practice? Jarrett, Kylie. Into the Blogosphere (2004). Articles>Web Design>Writing>Blogging 13. #20866 Be Succinct! (Writing for the Web) The three main guidelines for writing for the Web are: be succinct: write no more than 50% of the text you would have used in a hardcopy publication; write for scannability: don't require users to read long continuous blocks of text; use hypertext to split up long information into multiple pages. Nielsen, Jakob. Alertbox (1997). Articles>Web Design>Writing 14. #26489 Better Readability for Improving the Number of Site Viewers Web content readability is an often underestimated aspect for a web site. There are design rules for designers to follow, and there are SEO tips and tricks for SEO experts to use. But this is not all. Though beautiful designs and search engine optimization are extremely important, there are also other issues that a web marketer needs to consider in order to run the site successfully. Readability is one of them. Stoyanova, Tsvetanka. SEOchat (2005). Articles>Web Design>Writing>Search 15. #24015 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. Ivey, Keith C. Editorial Eye, The (1996). Articles>Web Design>Editing>Writing 16. #29941 Blah-Blah Text: Keep, Cut, or Kill? Introductory text on Web pages is usually too long, so users skip it. But short intros can increase usability by explaining the remaining content's purpose. Nielsen, Jakob. Alertbox (2007). Articles>Web Design>Writing>Usability 17. #25441 The Blog Realm: RSS, Aggregators, and Reading the Blog Fantastic The content management capabilities of blog software and the search options from Daypop provide incentives for information professionals to be aware, at least, of blogging. But for every blogger out there, there are probably a dozen or more others who prefer reading to writing. Notess, Greg R. Online Magazine (2002). Articles>Web Design>Writing>Blogging 18. #25447 Blog Survey: Expectations of Privacy and Accountability Reports the findings from an online survey conducted between January 14th and January 21st, 2004. During that time, 486 respondents answered questions about their blogging practices and their expectations of privacy and accountability for the entries they publish online. Fernanda, Viégas. MIT (2004). Articles>Web Design>Writing>Blogging 19. #24579 Blog Voice: How to Command Attention With over 4 million distinct blog voices in the blogosphere, how can you differentiate yourself? By being an interesting voice. Interesting voices are made, not born, and now you can learn some ways to become more interesting and influential in blogdom. CAUTION: not for boring blah blah blah bloggers who are smug and self-satisfied. Streight, Steven. Blogger.com (2004). Articles>Web Design>Writing>Blogging 20. #25491 Despite the timeliness of the issues, many bloggers are wondering whether their craft can be taught in journalism school. Shachtman, Noah. Wired (2002). Articles>Web Design>Writing>Blogging 21. #25245 Behind the scenes, in the limelight, ahead of the curve...'blogphets' have plenty to say to us mere mortals on what makes a blog 'tick.' Streight, Steven. Blogger.com (2005). Articles>Web Design>Writing>Blogging 22. #25496 W znaczeniu społecznym blog jest czymś więcej niż tylko narzędziem: jest wirtualnym miejscem skupiającym ludzi, gdzie można przebywać i realizować się społecznie, nawiązując relacje z innymi ludźmi. Blog jest tzw. Trzecim Miejscem zgodnie z teorią Oldenburga, który uznaje, że dopiero w trzecim najważniejszym miejscu (po Domu i Pracy/Szkole), człowiek może tworzyć "prawdziwe" relacje społeczne, które nie są zbudowane na hierarchii emocjonalnej lub strukturalnej (jak w przypadku rodziny i firmy) lecz powstają dzięki posiadanym cechom charakteru, zainteresowaniom czy stylowi życia w grupie. Cywinska-Milonas, Maria. Onet (2004). (Polish) Articles>Web Design>Writing>Blogging 23. #25574 Boost Your Website With Expert Content The only effective way to promote a website is by hosting unique, quality content. Search engine optimization and paid inclusions are a waste of time and money if there isn't a compelling reason for your visitors to come back once they have found you. Warren, Robert. TypePad.com (2003). Articles>Web Design>Writing 24. #25223 Branding Copy and Web Sites: A Bad Fit The trouble with using text as a branding tool on web pages is that it gets in the way of what visitors are looking for. Visitors want and expect text to be useful and information. They are in 'active' and 'engaged' mode. They are searching. They want something. Text that isn't useful is disappointing. Usborne, Nick. Excess Voice (2004). Articles>Web Design>Writing>Marketing 25. #25493 Bridging the Gap: A Genre Analysis of Weblogs Weblogs (blogs)--frequently modified web pages in which dated entries are listed in reverse chronological sequence--are the latest genre of Internet communication to attain widespread popularity, yet their characteristics have not been systematically described. This paper presents the results of a content analysis of 203 randomly-selected weblogs, comparing the empirically observable features of the corpus with popular claims about the nature of weblogs, and finding them to differ in a number of respects. Notably, blog authors, journalists and scholars alike exaggerate the extent to which blogs are interlinked, interactive, and oriented towards external events, and under-estimate the importance of blogs as individualistic, intimate forms of self-expression. Based on the profile generated by the empirical analysis, we consider the likely antecedents of the blog genre, situate it with respect to the dominant forms of digital communication on the Internet today, and advance predictions about its long-term impacts. Herring, Susan C., Lois Ann Scheidt, Sabrina Bonus and Elijah Wright. (We)blog Research on Genre Project, The (2004). Articles>Web Design>Writing>Blogging
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