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1. #19901 Achieving Success with Intranet-Based Online Documentation To key to achieving a successful online documentation implementation on the intranet is to understand that the resulting system is indeed a 'system.' The need for well-written, formatted and structured documents is necessary but the interactive framework in which those documents exist is equally important. It is crucial to understand the role of each individual involved in the system from Reader to Author and I.T. provider. Frost, Edward D.J. STC Proceedings (2001). Design>Documentation>Intranets>Web Design 2. #19917 Applying Object-Oriented Design Concepts to Web Publishing This is a story of how one internal project at Sun Microsystems migrated printed user and reference documentation to an internal Web site. The principle architect of this site discusses how she applied object-oriented design concepts to the Web architecture to accommodate many learning styles simultaneously. As important as the successes of this project are its failures, which offer some insight into when and how to use the World Wide Web as a communication vehicle in your overall communication strategy. Hoft, Nancy L. STC Proceedings (1996). Design>Documentation>Web Design 3. #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 4. #20287 Building the Treasure House: Creating Knowledge Bases on the World-Wide Web Web knowledge bases offer an excellent platform for delivering technical documentation and customer support information. They also represent an area of great opportunity for technical communicators to expand their skills, satisfy their customers, and create value for their employers or clients. This session explores the components of a web knowledge base and the tasks involved in planning and building one. Massa, Jack A. STC Proceedings (1998). Articles>Documentation>Online>Web Design 5. #29535 Communicating Design: Web Design Documentation An overview of web design methods, including a survey of questions one should ask during the process. Brown, Dan. SlideShare (2006). Presentations>Web Design>Documentation 6. #27658 Constructing a One-Stop "Answer Station" Website for Software Users The web allows us to easily provide updated documentation to our users, but why stop there? There is more to making users successful quickly than just providing documentation. By creating a complete 'Answer Station' that is accessible from the application or product, we can not only direct users to that updated documentation, but we can also provide information about technical support, consulting, training, sales, etc. This article discusses writing a proposal for an Answer Station, determining content, working with other departments to gather information, designing the site, making that design work with an existing corporate website, dealing with tool issues, and finally, going live. Bleiel, Nicoletta A. and Beth A. Williams. WritersUA (2004). Articles>Documentation>Web Design>Help 7. #28795 The Convergence of Web 2.0 with Help Documentation This podcast talks about the convergence of web 2.0 with help documentation. It mentions examples of Web 2.0 sites, such as Flickr, Payscale, and Digg, and what help files need to incorporate these same Web 2.0 features. Johnson, Tom H. Tech Writer Voices (2007). Design>Web Design>Documentation>Podcasts 8. #21564 Designing a Help System for a Web Site When I worked for a large insurance company, my team as tasked with re-designing the customer service area for a external Web site that supports annuities and mutual fund customers. I proposed redesigning the entire site including an actual help system (like with ones you can create with ROBOHELP) to reduce customer service support calls. I was really surprised that everyone thought this was such a novel idea -- I thought it made perfect sense. Then, it hit me -- you don't see a lot of help systems for Web sites. Leonard-Wilkinson, Theresa A. W-edge Design (1999). Design>Web Design>Documentation 9. #13105 Designing for the Web: Special Considerations for Safety Information Manufacturers are currently grappling with determining whether they should put safety information on the Web and if they do how it should be presented. Technical communicators, Web content developers, and Web designers will ultimately be responsible for the presentation of Web-based safety information. This article discusses special considerations that should be given the formatting (HTML, PDF, etc.), design, (font, size, and color), and location of safety information on the Web. Additionally, areas for future research on the issue of Web-based safety information are identified. Tallman, Lisa A. STC Proceedings (2001). Presentations>Web Design>Documentation 10. #23264 Hypertext for Handling Conceptual Material Turning 'help' systems and 'browsers' into robust structured-document viewers: the DocBrowser. Hoffman, Michael. Hypertext Navigation. Articles>Documentation>Web Design>Web Browsers 11. #30766 Is Your Website Poised to Deal With Its Growth? Every webmaster nourishes the dream that his or her website will make it the big way. This is very much human because people carry out any task in ardent hope. What is more human out here is that earthy fellows like us base our aspirations more on speculation rather than specific set of steps undertaken to bring the dream a bit closer to reality. And this is not all, particularly in case of growth of a site which brings newer problems in the wake of its growth. It cannot be disputed that you can probably get some good web hosting on economy price. But if you expect top of the line service on this price, acknowedge gracefully that your are just asking for the moon. Probably you are not catching up with wisdom that business needs decisive investments. Azam, Rahbre. Amateur Writerz (2008). Articles>Documentation>Web Design>Technical Writing 12. #19958 Large-Scale HTML Conversion Using a Word Processor In 2000, the Hitachi Technical Information Department carried out a large-scale documentation project requiring the revision of 47 English manuals (about 15,000 pages) and production of the manuals in both paper and HTML formats. Many projects of this size would normally use more complex software and file formats, such as FrameMaker and SGML. However, most of the English manuals were already in Microsoft Word (hence forth 'Word') format, and we decided to use Word 2000 to convert the manual document files into HTML files directly. The presentation discusses solutions to problems encountered in this HTML conversion project. Hara, Takayoshi and Mayumi Seitou. STC Proceedings (2001). Design>Documentation>Web Design 13. #20551 Restructuring Online Documentation for the World Wide Web Technical communicators around the world are turning to the World Wide Web us their primary delivery agent for on-line documentation. The transition from older forms of on-line documentation to HTML-based documents pre - sents new challenges in every phase of the documentation process: document creation, layout, access, and especially hypermedia capability The constant development of new web tools presents an even greater challenge for an organization seeking to stay abreast of technology with an ever decreasing budget. This panel will outline the basic steps in migrating to the web while focusing on one organization’s solution to meeting the challenges of restructuring its on-line documentation for web migration. Goode, Christina M., Jennifer Campbell and David Hale. STC Proceedings (1996). Articles>Documentation>Web Design>Online 14. #25619 Six Tips for Improving Your Design Documentation Good organization, complete information, and clear writing are, of course, key to the success of any design document, but there are some other, less-obvious techniques you can use to make your documents more readable and understandable. Here are a few of them. Olshavsky, Ryan. Boxes and Arrows (2003). Articles>Web Design>Documentation 15. #23216 Visual Vocabulary Three Years Later: An Interview with Jesse James Garrett This interview focuses on Jesse James Garret's Visual Vocabulary, a site architecture documentation standard. Brown, Dan. Boxes and Arrows (2003). Design>Documentation>Information Design>Web Design 16. #22651 Your product is almost ready for release. You're about to pat yourself on the back when you realize that you have no user documentation! Panic sets in. Nichols, BeLinda. Webmonkey (2000). Design>Web Design>Documentation
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