A directory of resources inthe field of technical communication.

Design>Web Design>History

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1.
#25604

Architecting Our Profession

The change within the interface design process over the past five to ten years has coincided with an increasing number of large companies refining an industrial style model of design instead of focusing on specialization or interaction sustainability through design accuracy.

Evans, Clifton. Boxes and Arrows (2005). Design>Web Design>History

2.
#26203

Brewster Kahle Saves the Web

The Internet Archive is one of the largest archives of digital media in existence. It contains five times more information than is in the Library of Congress and several times more information than is currently available publicly on the web. David Womack interviewed its creator, Brewster Kahle, for Loop.

Womack, David. AIGA (2002). Articles>Web Design>History

3.
#26139

Corporate Pages 2002-2004 (Part 1)

In 2002 I saved nine sample web pages from corporate web sites, for teaching purposes. On 1 June 2004 I took another look at those pages or their current equivalent. No way is this a systematic study or even a random sample. But the results are interesting and do reflect trends in corporate web sites.

McAlpine, Rachel. Quality Web Content (2005). Design>Web Design>History

4.
#29560

CSS @ Ten: The Next Big Thing

CSS is ten years old this year. Such an anniversary is an opportunity to revisit the past and chart the future. CSS has fundamentally changed web design by separating style from structure. It has provided designers with a set of properties that can be tweaked to make marked-up pages look rightand CSS3 proposes additional properties requested by designers.

Lie, Hakon. List Apart, A (2007). Design>Web Design>CSS>History

5.
#29799

'Faces of the Fallen' and the Dematerialization of US War Memorials   (peer-reviewed)   (members only)

The advent of internet technology has enabled the process of memorialization of those killed in US military conflicts to keep pace with the casualties themselves and, as such, has marked a shift in both the ideology of the war memorial as symbol and the ideology-driven media use of those symbols. This article argues that a process of increasing humanization and specificity enabled by the information architecture of the internet has led to a form of `war memorial', exemplified by www.facesofthefallen.org, that emphasizes decontexualized human loss at the expense of a coherent representation of a military nature for the loss itself.

Grider, Nicholas. Visual Communication (2007). Articles>Web Design>Visual Rhetoric>History

6.
#25554

The History of Weblogs

Weblogs are often-updated sites that point to articles elsewhere on the web, often with comments, and to on-site articles.

Winer, Dave. Weblogs.com (2003). Articles>Web Design>History>Blogging

7.
#21432

How Programmers Stole the Web

In the late 1970s, a great flood of creative talent, drawn from the ranks of people who had never before touched a computer, took to the keyboards of the early microcomputers and started a revolution. The early programming environments and languages were simple, natural, and accessible. Within five years, that group had been disenfranchised by the advent of 'serious' computing environments, such as Pascal and C, and software settled back down to being the business of professionals. With the advent of the web, another even greater flood of talent was unleashed, but this time the end came sooner. Within two years, the originally simple HTML environment had become clouded with hacks on top of hacks, as the C++ boys moved in and took over. The new talent could only continue to produce pretty pictures, while the traditional priesthood again took up the real work of programming. The web has stagnated ever since.

Tognazzini, Bruce. Nielsen Norman Group (2000). Design>Web Design>History

8.
#31984

HTML Museum: Font and Page Size

I want to spend some time on a series of articles on web design usability practices. I call this series, the HTML Museum. I hope to update it with articles that address past web design practices and why they are no longer in use.The first exhibit deals with font, text and page size.

Lanier, Clinton R. sense and usability (2008). Articles>Web Design>Typography>History

9.
#18722

Interaction Design History in a Teeny Little Nutshell   (PDF)

Before computers, there wasn’t 'interaction design.' But most of the qualities we seek have been valued through the ages.

Rettig, Marc. MarcRettig.com (2003). Design>Web Design>Interaction Design>History

10.
#20832

Kill the 53-Day Meme

One frequently finds newspaper or magazine articles about the Internet or the World Wide Web stating that the number of servers on the WWW is doubling every 53 days, 'according to a source at Sun Microsystems.' Well, I am that source, and I don't believe the 53-day estimate any more.

Nielsen, Jakob. Alertbox (1995). Articles>Web Design>History

11.
#21731

Lessons Learned from the Dot.Com Crash: A Passenger's Story

Describes the inner workings of the dot.coms during the high-speed transition from irrational exuberance to outright panic.

Morville, Peter. Argus Center (2001). Design>Web Design>History

12.
#27635

Podcasting: The Devastating Lows, the Dizzying Highs, the Creeeeeeeamy Middles

I'm going to introduce podcasting via talking about its history, and work through what a podcast actually is. Then I'll talk about our experience podcasting WE05, both from a practical and a business point of view. The overarching theme of this presentation will be podcasting from the broadcaster's point of view. For info about podcasting from the listener's point of view, check this page here.

Sherrin, Maxine. Western Civilization (2005). (Afrikaans) Articles>Web Design>History>Podcasting

13.
#21173

Progressive Enhancement and the Future of Web Design

A look at the past and future of Web design, including a new strategy called progressive enhancement.

Champeon, Steve. Webmonkey (2003). Design>Web Design>History

14.
#26647

Tracking Changes on Web Pages

Often a small change to a web page is a clue that something big has happened or will happen, and automated tracking tools alert you the moment something has changed.

Price, Gary. Search Engine Watch (2006). Articles>Web Design>Search>History

15.
#29117

Using the Internet as a Tool for Public Service: Creating a Community History Web Site   (peer-reviewed)   (members only)

Creating a community history Web site is a way for technical communication practitioners, students, and teachers to improve their expertise while performing a valuable public service. Developers of this kind of Web site combine personal interest in the history and culture of their chosen communities with professional interest in a wide range of skills: for example, online research, Web site design, creation of artwork, photography, graphics editing, collaboration, professional/technical writing, as well as site publication and promotion. Technical communicators working on community history Web sites enjoy creative freedom that makes these projects especially engaging and fun. While learning about subjects of particular interest and improving professional skills, developers gain the satisfaction of trying to help communities increase civic pride and heritage tourism. Also, the technical communication profession benefits when its members demonstrate good citizenship to employers, other constituencies, and the public.

Henson, Darold Leigh. Journal of Technical Writing and Communication (2005). Articles>Web Design>Community Building>History

16.
#25556

Weblogs and Power Laws

It's been shown that the distribution of links on the web scales according to a power law, so it comes as no surprise that the distribution of links to weblogs does as well.

Kottke, Jason. kottke.org (2003). Articles>Web Design>History>Blogging

17.
#25551

Weblogs: A History and Perspective

Rebecca Blood, an early blogger, describes the rise of blogging.

Blood, Rebecca. Adobe (2005). Articles>Web Design>History>Blogging

18.
#19014

Xanadu Systemet

Ted Nelsons Xanadu system tog sin begyndelse omkring 1960, som et universitetsprojekt. I Xanadu er der tale om hypertext, som igen vil henvise til hyperlinks. Men i Xanadu systemet kan man rent faktisk godt tale om en kæde (læs; Links).

Quark, The (2002). (Danish) Design>Web Design>History

19.
#32427

The History of the Internet and the Web, and the Evolution of Web Standards

a brief overview of the creation of the Internet, the World Wide Web, and the "web standards" that this entire series focuses upon. I think it is useful and interesting to understand how we got to where we are, but it will be short enough so you don’t get overwhelmed, and can get into the details nice and quickly.

Francis, Mark Norman. Opera (2008). Articles>Web Design>Standards>History

20.
#32899

Digital Content Developers and Cultural Memory

Digital content producers must regard preservation and archiving as an essential task.

McLeod, Michael. Content Matters (2006). Articles>Web Design>Cultural Theory>History

21.
#35393

HTML Evolution

HTML is being developed outside of the W3C by a number of browser implementers, excluding Microsoft. The prevalent feeling amongst those that do so is that if the W3C doesn't adopt their spec, the W3C will look dull.

Intertwingly.net (2009). Articles>Web Design>History>HTML5

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