Disappointing Designs
Fred Showker catches a line from a
Pete Seeger classic, Where have
all the flowers gone? His flowers
are the web designers that he thinks
are going extinct. He laments on the
seeming decay in the art
of web designing and says gone are the
designers who made a difference in the
making of web designs and who provided
quality sites for the people to visit.
Showker argues that he has seen a decline
in the quality of web sites basing from
reviews he made of several sites. From
his statements, I can see that he is
well-versed in making analyses of web
sites and is a credible source of information.
Many sites came under his meticulous
scrutiny and not one was spared.
Some of the sites that he revisited
were dead and others that are still
up failed to meet the expected standards.
The changes he saw came as a shock since
he did not expect many of them to go
down the drain.
Riddler.com was one site that Showker
said proved to be a disappointment as
it took out of consideration the reading
pleasure of the reader and instead took
on a much commercialized look. Webshaker.com
is similar as well.
Ben & Jerrys ice cream was
another site that was axe by Showker.
Indeed, I was surprise to see a content
in the site about the Black History
month with Martin Luther King Jr.s
picture in it. I have to agree with
Fred on this one as I see no relevance
of the content in promoting B&Js
ice cream. Perhaps there is an underlying
purpose for that but I honestly dont
see its bearing here.
Of course there are web sites that
met Showkers scrutiny like Hallmark,
Camobell Soups and Smuckers. These sites
provided a good site for browsing and
had a good visual offering for the visitor.
Fred Showkers main thesis in
his review is the importance of the
reader as an element in the creation
of web sites. The site must be tailor-made
for the reader for it to reap the fullest
benefits. The content must be of relevance
to the reader and not just provide a
stiff approach to giving out information.
He further adds that a site may come
up short on the design aspect but it
still should follow this basic concept,
"The reader is the most important
element in the equation." Style
gives way to message, and content is
STILL king.
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