Search
Recommended Sites
Related Links






   

Informative Articles

Advantages and Disadvantages of Frames
To use Frames or not to use Frames... That is the question... I've kept away from using frames in any of my work where possible. As much as I like some of the features that frames offer, such as a static header area and side menu bar, there is...

Are you cross-browser compatible?
The question of cross browser compatibility is a common topic among Web developers. Should you or should you not make your website cross-browser accommodating? The answer is yes and especially if you are an e-business. As Ripley would say, "believe...

Setting up a Test Server on Your Own Computer
When you're developing a website, you need to see it in action on a real server, to see how it will work. While you could upload your pages to your web host every time you make a change, this quickly gets time-consuming and tiresome. Wouldn't it...

Seven Free Tools to Create your Web Site
Coding your HTML by hand gives much better results than using a WYSIWYG program. You can get the layout that you want, and make small adjustments easily. NotePad comes free with Windows - but a much better text editor is NoteTab Light. This has a...

The Best and Easiest Google-Friendly Change to Your Web Site
No matter who you are or how much you pay for web site advertising, free search engine traffic is probably responsible for a big part of your business. So why make your web site so hard for search engines to figure out? Luckily, it seems like in...

 
Fix My Website: Practical Graphics

Despite my lousy eyesight, I'm a hopelessly visual person. When I
dink around with the site I co-edit with my friend Mary, I scan
large stacks of photos and pictures from old pamphlets, and use
them liberally. I admit it: I'm a graphics abuser, though
sometimes I can't help myself.

This week, I stumbled on two separate articles (one online, one
in print) that reminded me lots of people turn off graphics when
they surf. I was humbled, and thought about going home to boot
some of those images off our site (I'll get back to you on that
one). The point is this: if you're aiming to get your site in
front of as many eyes as possible, you need to build your site as
if everyone on the planet was still pulling up pages with a pokey
24k modem-or a Palm Pilot, for that matter.

*If they can't see it-tell them what it is. You've probably run
your mouse over an image (perhaps you could see it, perhaps it
did not load) to see a yellow window pop up, with a descriptive
phrase inside, e.g., "Stuffed Quetl Bird, circa 1917." If they
can't see the pictures, tell them what's there. You can do this
by adding a scrap of code into your image tag: alt="Stuffed Quetl
Bird, circa 1917"

and insert it so:
Stuffed Quetl Bird, circa 1917border="0" align="right">
If you don't like to mess with HTML code, go to the help files
for your particular HTML editor and see how to insert this
coding.
*Text Links. Those who cannot see your links cannot navigate
your pages (or at the very least, they'll have a heck of a time).
Search engines won't be able to detect a title or a phrase if
it's inside a GIF - after all, it's not a word, it's a picture of
a word. You don't have to do away with your cool buttons
entirely, but be sure to add text links at the bottom of the
page. This is usually a good idea anyway, images or no; orienting
your user at every turn assures that they won't get lost.

*10,000 Calorie Graphics: Just Say No. Impatient Americans will
not wait half an hour for a big fat graphic to download. The rest
of the world pays for internet access by the hour, and can't
afford to wait that long.

*The First Magic Number is 100. Most web experts advise keeping
pages under 100k for efficient loading. The best program I've
come across for shrinking images without compromising their
quality is Ulead Smartsaver. You can dowload a copy of SmartSaver
3.0 on ZDNet.
http://www.zdnet.com/downloads/stories/info/0,,000MF0,.html
And for more info, visit the Bandwidth Conservation Society:
http://www.infohiway.com/faster/index.html

*The Second Magic number is 216. For best results, stick with
the 216 known web-safe colors. Find out more at the Smart Color
Picker:
http://reallybig.com/resource.php3?catid=21&id=1583

*Thumbnails. If you want so show off photographs of your product,
be smart-use thumbnail images in your catalogue that link to a
larger version of the photo, so the user can choose to clog up
his or her phone line, rather than feel ambushed by a huge
picture of tap shoes or home-grown herbs. More on that:
http://www.collectorsforum.com humbnail.html

*Crimson and Clover, over and over Got a logo or a top bar? Good.
Use that puppy on every page for your graphic. If it's the same
graphic on every page, you'll speed things up for your users;
their computer only has to download that image once, thus
speeding things along for everyone.

And now, I'll print this list and take it home with me; it's time
to get down off my soapbox and follow my own advice!

About the Author
Stefene Russell is a freelance writer living in Salt Lake City,
Utah. She has worked as a print journalist and as Senior Content
Producer for citysearch.com.
For a free website analysis, email her at stefene@drnunley.com or
for a detailed analysis, visit
http://www.fixmywebsite.com/analysis.htm

Sign up for PayPal and start accepting credit card payments instantly.