Auf unserer Baustellenseite finden sich alle Seiten mit ToDos. Trotzdem wollen wir einzelne Baustellen, die immer wieder auffallen, Euch hier besonders ans Herz legen:
Finnish employment offices desparately need neurodivergent web designers to fix their shit websites. The buttons make no sense and all of their questions are written in a way that makes NO FUCKING SENSE.
I am burnt out from waiting in a call line to hear where is this shit I need to fill up and then trying to desypher wtf their questions actually meant.
The interface is coming along. There's still a lot I want to do to improve this screen (filters, search, etc), but as a starting point with CRUD operations, I'm pleased with the results.
A Nerdy Note - There's a lot going on under the hood, here. This app is platform agnostic, so it can be changed to run as a mobile app instead - with complete extensibility of the interface from the server. I'll get into how all of that works someday.
I've already said this before but I'll say it again...
One change I'd like to see in the World Wide Web, is the emergence of websites that can't be accessed 24 hours a day.
Maybe that's a website that's only available from 9-5 each day.
Or maybe it's a web forum that you can only post on for a one hour period every week.
Too much UX design is about pushing people to stay on websites as long as possible.
I won't need to tell you that this obviously encourages unhealthy behaviour from the people using a web service but also...
Also, it means that if a web service goes down at any time of day or night, some poor bastard has to stop whatever they are doing and spend an indeterminate amount of time trying to fix it while the whole entire userbase cries murder.
Maybe, just maybe, we can set boundaries.
Maybe an admin doesn't need to be on call at any time of day or night.
Maybe that thing that you really want to post at 3am can wait until the morning (at which point you might end up being glad that you didn't post it).
Hey #webdesign#webdev folks, I'm looking for an example of an HTML “Style guide" page for a website. I've seen some blogs that sport this in the past but can't for the life of me find one again or Google for it. It's basically just a simple page on a site that has examples of all (or most) HTML elements and how they are styled for that site. I could just make one myself but would prefer to boostrap the process by getting a pre-made one to start and tweak from there. Thanks!
Mal ehrlich, über #WCAG hatte ich mich noch zu wenig auseinandergesetzt aber auch grosse #WebDev so wie #WebDesign Firmen setzten dies selten um. Ich sehe sehr selten Seiten im #Web, die dies in ihrem #Design berücksichtigen oder täusche ich mich?
Klar es benötigt ua einen gewissen Aufwand aber evt kann mensch es kaum logisch verrechnen, wie von #Kunden erwünscht nehme ich mal an.
Not sure it was Tim Berners-Lee’s vision that web documents would fk his tech stack up so badly that the only way to read them was to use Reader mode to scrape off the layers of shit
“Web Design as a Process” in Charts: Maintenance, Decay, Tech Debt, and Big Bang Launching:
Web design is a process. This process relates to the quality and completeness of a given website, as observed over time. We can chart and understand different types of this process.