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by Bob McFarlane
Product Group: Book
Publisher: Butterworth-Heinemann (1999-02-26)
ISBN: 0340740531
EAN: 9780340740538
Dewy Decimal #: 620.004202855369
Paperback: 166 pages
SKU: 080708024
Condition: Used: Good
Comments: ...No noticeable Underlining or Highlighting...
More Product Infomation
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Editorial Reviews
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Product Description
AutoCAD users with some experience will find this book the perfect tutor for more advanced topics like attributes and customisation methods as well as for increasing their proficiency and productivity. Bob McFarlane remains a popular and respected author; his fluent style and carefully crafted exercises present even the most technically challenging concepts clearly and imaginatively.
The ideal 'next step' for readers of 'Beginning AutoCAD R14', 'Advancing with AutoCAD R14' is an effective tutorial that is suitable both for students working alone and for classroom use. The book is ideal for the more advanced City and Guilds schemes as well as the National and Higher Certificates in Draughting and Design. Professional engineers using CAD in the workplace will also find this a useful reference guide.
Encourages the reader to'earn by doing' through a series of graded tutorials Helps the user to make full use of the software's potential Is the latest in the best-selling range of McFarlane titles
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by Ray Kristof, Amy Satran
Product Group: Book
Publisher: Pearson Education (1995-07-21)
ISBN: 1568302215
EAN: 9781568302218
Dewy Decimal #: 005.12
Paperback: 144 pages
Edition: 1
SKU: 090108003
Condition: Used: Good
Comments: ...no markings or highlighting...minor wear on cover
More Product Infomation
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Editorial Reviews
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Product Description
This is the first title of an exciting new series from Adobe Press. The book explores how to use Interactivity, one of the hottest topics in the computer design industry. It highlights professional quality, 4-color groundbreaking design techniques, and features Interactivity as a design application in multimedia, CD-ROM, On-line and other applications.
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Amazon.com Review
This book is an excellent guide for marketing, communications, and other professionals who need to develop a CD-ROM, kiosk, or Web site. Amy Satran and Ray Kristof make an intelligent distinction between information design, interaction design, and presentation design, discussing such issues as audience research, resource planning, image maps, navigation, storyboard and prototype production, and final output. The presentation design section is key, providing non-designers with a primer on working with resolution and color within the constraints of Web and CD delivery. There is also instruction on devising coherent and consistent style and layout. Get this book if you need to learn what's going on with new media quickly.
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Customer Reviews
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Three Threads Of Interactive Design
Rating (5)
Date: 2005-10-07
1 out of 2 customers found this reveiw helpful
This is a benchmark book for interactive design. It separates the design process into information design, interactive design and presentation design. Those who head the process and focus on information design tasks at the beginning of an interactive project will find that costs are lower.
Information design changes are easiest at the beginning of a project and create large cost problems at the end.
If you have proceeded with good information design then interactive design and costs are much less difficult and less expensive.
Finally if you have made good information design and interactive design decisions, then you have a vast arrays of how to present the final product. It is at this stage the costs the highest with graphic designers, video producers, web developers, programmers and so on.
Read the book and memorize the process.
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A bit too simple!
Rating (2)
Date: 2003-05-11
2 out of 5 customers found this reveiw helpful
The book promised a lot based on previous readers' reviews and the publishing house's reputation but I was disappointed with its contents. The information is well presented but too simplistic. Lacking any further elaboration this book is of little use if you have some experience in the field of interactive design. A good brain-storming session at home would come up with the same findings of this book.
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Sill holds up.
Rating (5)
Date: 2002-01-14
2 out of 3 customers found this reveiw helpful
I have had this book for 4+ years. I loaned it to a friend once who didn't return it, so I bough another one.Among the dozens of books I own and read on usability or project management, etc. this one is fantastic - a real stand-out. The one drawback is that it's not as contemporary/up-to-the-minute as newer books. [shrug]
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A great book for teaching
Rating (5)
Date: 2000-08-31
5 out of 5 customers found this reveiw helpful
This is nicely organized, introduces important concepts and explains them in plain english. I used it as a textbook for a multimedia class and it was well received. You will not find fancy tricks and designs, but you will get a good overview of multimedia, interface design and project management. It is 'outdated' so it is not suitable for experts but its information is excellent for an intro class, especially for people with little graphics experience.
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Simple. Clear. Invaluable.
Rating (5)
Date: 2000-04-23
6 out of 7 customers found this reveiw helpful
For once, someone makes the distinction between information design, interaction design and presentation design. This book was invaluable in helping our division more clearly define our process for product development.
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by Ray Kristof, Amy Satran
Product Group: Book
Publisher: Pearson Education (1995-07-21)
ISBN: 1568302215
EAN: 9781568302218
Dewy Decimal #: 005.12
Paperback: 144 pages
Edition: 1
SKU: 090108003
Condition: Used: Good
Comments: ...no markings or highlighting...minor wear on cover
More Product Infomation
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Editorial Reviews
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Product Description
This is the first title of an exciting new series from Adobe Press. The book explores how to use Interactivity, one of the hottest topics in the computer design industry. It highlights professional quality, 4-color groundbreaking design techniques, and features Interactivity as a design application in multimedia, CD-ROM, On-line and other applications.
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Amazon.com Review
This book is an excellent guide for marketing, communications, and other professionals who need to develop a CD-ROM, kiosk, or Web site. Amy Satran and Ray Kristof make an intelligent distinction between information design, interaction design, and presentation design, discussing such issues as audience research, resource planning, image maps, navigation, storyboard and prototype production, and final output. The presentation design section is key, providing non-designers with a primer on working with resolution and color within the constraints of Web and CD delivery. There is also instruction on devising coherent and consistent style and layout. Get this book if you need to learn what's going on with new media quickly.
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Customer Reviews
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Three Threads Of Interactive Design
Rating (5)
Date: 2005-10-07
1 out of 2 customers found this reveiw helpful
This is a benchmark book for interactive design. It separates the design process into information design, interactive design and presentation design. Those who head the process and focus on information design tasks at the beginning of an interactive project will find that costs are lower.
Information design changes are easiest at the beginning of a project and create large cost problems at the end.
If you have proceeded with good information design then interactive design and costs are much less difficult and less expensive.
Finally if you have made good information design and interactive design decisions, then you have a vast arrays of how to present the final product. It is at this stage the costs the highest with graphic designers, video producers, web developers, programmers and so on.
Read the book and memorize the process.
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A bit too simple!
Rating (2)
Date: 2003-05-11
2 out of 5 customers found this reveiw helpful
The book promised a lot based on previous readers' reviews and the publishing house's reputation but I was disappointed with its contents. The information is well presented but too simplistic. Lacking any further elaboration this book is of little use if you have some experience in the field of interactive design. A good brain-storming session at home would come up with the same findings of this book.
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Sill holds up.
Rating (5)
Date: 2002-01-14
2 out of 3 customers found this reveiw helpful
I have had this book for 4+ years. I loaned it to a friend once who didn't return it, so I bough another one.Among the dozens of books I own and read on usability or project management, etc. this one is fantastic - a real stand-out. The one drawback is that it's not as contemporary/up-to-the-minute as newer books. [shrug]
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A great book for teaching
Rating (5)
Date: 2000-08-31
5 out of 5 customers found this reveiw helpful
This is nicely organized, introduces important concepts and explains them in plain english. I used it as a textbook for a multimedia class and it was well received. You will not find fancy tricks and designs, but you will get a good overview of multimedia, interface design and project management. It is 'outdated' so it is not suitable for experts but its information is excellent for an intro class, especially for people with little graphics experience.
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Simple. Clear. Invaluable.
Rating (5)
Date: 2000-04-23
6 out of 7 customers found this reveiw helpful
For once, someone makes the distinction between information design, interaction design and presentation design. This book was invaluable in helping our division more clearly define our process for product development.
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by Laura Lemay
Product Group: Book
Publisher: Sams (1999-03-23)
ISBN: 0672313057
EAN: 9780672313059
UPC: 752063313053
Dewy Decimal #: 005.133
Paperback: 720 pages
SKU: 050208031
Condition: Used: Good
Comments: ...No Underlining or Highlighting...curled corners on cover
More Product Infomation
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Editorial Reviews
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Product Description
Sams Teach Yourself Perl in 21 Days covers the basics of Perl in the first few chapters, and then moves on to practical issues of Perl and in-depth discussions of more advanced topics. Later chapters also delve into software engineering topics, with discussions of modular code and object-oriented programming. CGI is covered in one chapter, but it is not the focus on the book. The book relies heavily on longer working examples and code, as opposed to small snippets and code fragments, and each chapter includes two to three smaller complete examples and one major one that illustrates most of the concepts for that chapter and builds on the chapters before it. Written by Laura Lemay, this is her third major book after Sams Teach Yourself Web Publishing with HTML in 21 Days and Sams Teach Yourself Java in 21 Days.
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Amazon.com Review
A great book for beginning programmers who want to learn Perl. Filled with concrete examples and, yes, by using this book you will be able to write good Perl code on your own in 21 days. But no perlson is an island, and there is no single book that covers Perl completely, so we recommend that you also get Programming Perl, which is better at providing the language specifications, and, in fact, was written by the author of Perl.
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Customer Reviews
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Great book - clear and easy to read
Rating (5)
Date: 2006-07-12
I find myself using this book as a refernce almost every day. It is well written and easy to follow. I highly recommend it.
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I haven't even finished the book and I am already feeling like a perl programmer
Rating (5)
Date: 2006-02-10
4 out of 4 customers found this reveiw helpful
I bought this book after trying to learn Perl through another book (Perl for Bioinformatics). This book is definitely a better introduction to Perl than any other book I've seen. It is clear and concise enough and although it might be hard to finish it in 21 days, you can start coding your own scripts much before the end of the book. I am still on chapter 11 and I can program most of what I need with it (i.e parsers and simple bioinformatics applications). I recognize that there are a few typos on the book but if even Knuth's Art of Computer Programming have them why shouldn't Lemay's Teach Yourself Perl in 21 Days do the same?
Given what I said above, I must warn begginer programmers (like me) that Perl is not the best language for you to learn as your first one. It is a dirty scripting language which does the job and is most suitable for parsing files and formatting data but it has a lot of things which make it quite confusing initially (its context dependency for instance). If you want to learn something that will give a solid programming base you should start with something else (i.e. Java, Pascal, Ruby etc) which will probably be a little bit harder but will payoff later.
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Above Average Introduction
Rating (4)
Date: 2005-08-14
23 out of 23 customers found this reveiw helpful
Teach Yourself Perl in 21 Days by Laura Lemay is sufficient for the beginner wanting to learn Perl, be it on Windows or a UNIX-based operating system. If Perl is your first programming language, then this book is a fairly good book to choose as a starting point. It teaches the basics of programming in Perl and moves quickly from that point onward.
However, while this approach introduced me to the language I found my ability to pace through the book as I normally would with other programming languages hindered by the author's organization. Unexplained code is used in almost all of the examples before you get to its respective chapter. While this approach may work for some and give cause for thinking, it gave me an unnecessary headache.
Don't get me wrong, it did teach me a good bit about Perl, it inspired me to install Debian Linux on my programming workstation, and left me to pursue Perl. Despite this, I turned to Learning Perl. I found Lemay's writing to be too verbose and the organization of the book a bit of a twister.
Overall, it can be summed up by the following pros/cons:
~ Pros
- Good introduction to Perl
- Independent of Operating System (Great for Windows users ready to Learn Perl and perhaps Migrate to Linux for programming purposes)
- Solid examples and references
- Covers more advanced topics later on
~ Cons
- Verbose
- Awkward structure. Things such as loops are constantly used in beginning examples without much of an explanation. If you don't' have any experience with programming, it will give you a headache. The sections on these devices come much later, and have a strange introduction as well.
- Frustrating at times when it shouldn't be (IE, having you use functions that you haven't learned, or haven't been mentioned, in an example for a particular chapter)
Additionally, I'd recommend picking up Learning Perl or using it instead. I picked up Teach Yourself Perl in 21 Days, learned what I could, and then fell in love with Learning Perl's concise, straight to the point chapters and examples (albeit with a fair amount of humor). If you're a Linux/UNIX user, you'll probably find Learning Perl a better catch, but for me, Teach Yourself Perl in 21 Days was the stepping stone to Linux and Learning Perl. Overall, I'm satisfied with my purchase.
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Good intro book on Perl
Rating (4)
Date: 2004-10-05
15 out of 15 customers found this reveiw helpful
If you want to start programming Perl in the shortest time possible, and have some programming background, you will benefit from reading Sam's Teach Yourself Perl in 24 Hours, which packs a lot of practical materials and emphasizes get-your-hands-dirty-immediately as well as uses a lot of code snippets to teach.
This "in 21 days" book, on the other hand, is better if you have more time to learn Perl. Each lesson takes 1-2 hours, if you already have some programming background, and longer if you don't. This book treats Perl more systematically and in more details than the "24 hours" book. It explains a lot of concepts, including hashes and modules, more clearly than the "24 hours" book. I recommend you do 2 or 3 lessons each day, because Perl is such a compact yet complicated language, that it's best to force yourself to learn it quickly, rather than slowly, because slow learning will make you forget things. Be sure to study the examples in the book until you understand every line of code.
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It just didn't work for me
Rating (3)
Date: 2003-10-27
7 out of 9 customers found this reveiw helpful
This book is not helpful for the newbies. Not only do some of the scripts not work, but the way Perl is explained in this book, it just doesn't make enough sense. I learned more from online tutorials that were perhaps 3 pages long than I learned in 15 pages of one chapter of this book. I usually pick things up quite easily, so it must be the book that is confusing.At least two of the script examples given in Chapters 1-8 had typos in them, and not enough explanation for someone that doesn't know much to figure out what. I am unfortunately going to have to give up on this book to learn Perl and turn to the internet... too bad I spent $35 for the book. I don't recommend this book to anyone except perhaps someone that already knows Perl.
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by Vincent Flanders, Dean Peters
Product Group: Book
Publisher: Sybex Inc (2002-04-05)
ISBN: 0782140203
EAN: 9780782140200
UPC: 025211440209
Dewy Decimal #: 005.72
Paperback: 320 pages
SKU: 082908016
Condition: Used: Good
Comments: ..moderate cover wear..has cd
More Product Infomation
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Editorial Reviews
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Product Description
From Vincent Flanders, co-author of the best-selling Web Pages That Suck, comes an all-new, irreverent look at the web's worst. Whether you're designing a site for your digital photos or in charge of your Fortune 500 company's web presence, you need to read Flanders take on the many mistakes that undermine some of the best-known sites on the web. Within these full-color pages, you'll: TREMBLE at the horror of Mystery Meat Navigation RUN SCREAMING from splishy splashy Flash pages CONQUER your web nightmares by learning the four guiding principles of smart web design MASTER the art of spotting a page's flaws in two minutes flat Written from the ground up to cover today's biggest web design challenges, Son of Web Pages That Suck also features a CD packed with great utilities to help you design, test, and manage your site, plus links for web-based resources discussed in the book.
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Customer Reviews
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Keeps students interested!
Rating (5)
Date: 2006-06-30
2 out of 2 customers found this reveiw helpful
This book is written in a manner that makes students laugh and want to continue reading. I use it as a class reference book but had to order more as it was regularly checked out. Students use Flanders site along with the Cool Site of the Day website to review sites daily. They then write their own reviews using the guidelines suggested in the book. Design techniques have improved tremendously!
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Great for techno-weenies caught up in features
Rating (4)
Date: 2005-10-04
3 out of 4 customers found this reveiw helpful
This book is fantastic for those of us who know how do code sites all day long but aren't that great at design. I don't know that I will end up buying the book, however. I learned what I needed to from it by borrowing it from the library and taking notes as I went.
What this book made me do was to think about what my users needed to make the page work for them. If you're in e-commerce, you want to know what will help users click to buy. If you're sharing opinion or fact, you want your users to click on the information you have to offer. If they don't read it or won't click on it, you've "lost the sale."
What this book does for me is to help technical people like me be more aware of the asthetics of site design. If my site doesn't have a site map, people who use site maps won't stick around long. If my site doesn't have a search capability, many users will go elsewhere so they can search through a site rather than having to click to find what they want.
I could go on, but SOWPTS does its job very well - it educates users on what doesn't work. It goes beyond it as well by helping us find alternatives to "what sucks" so our pages can reach more of our audience.
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Self Aggrandizement
Rating (1)
Date: 2005-04-09
4 out of 23 customers found this reveiw helpful
If you like Madison Avenue hype you should take to this book sweetly because that's what it's all about,(crass, loud, stupid, repetitive drivel.) To say this author is a hypocrite and a shameless self-promoter would be just stating the obvious to anyone with an IQ above 85. The question is,'Is it entertaining?'. I don't think so although I did find it offensive in many places. Here's one : He thinks Barry White's teeth sparkling on an ad displayed at Amazon.com was racist and offensive but somehow his coined repetitive use of the term 'Mystery Meat' for 'Interactive Navigation' is not. Oh yeah, here's another great quote, 'The only way I'm waiting 9 minutes for a page to load is if I get to see Penelope Cruz in her birthday suit !'. Nothing offensive or sexist about that stupid remark and that's the problem with this book in a nutshell; too much of idiot Flanders and not enough objective content. Like I said if you were a schoolyard bully and really adore Madison Ave. and idiocy then this book will make you smile. I've personally known more sensitive guys on loading docks.
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A webmasters job is never complete
Rating (5)
Date: 2004-07-27
9 out of 9 customers found this reveiw helpful
Ok all I can say is wow. This man uses insults (accurately) to get the job done. I found myself wanting to redo things on my site and other sites I design just so he wouldn't find it and use it as a bad example. Good God. He is RIGHT ON on a lot of that stuff.
I disagreed him with him when it came to Flash. He thinks Flash is unnecessary, which it is in certain circumstances... but... he failed to mention adult sites which really use the art of visualization for the ultimate sale, which is what he discusses - that websites should be about bringing in money. Other than that and his not-so-secret hate for splash pages (although again, he failed to mention that some sites actually REQUIRE them by law)... I agreed with him on everything else in the book.
He gets into the Do's and Don'ts and really blasts the sites that use tacky animated Gifs on clashing backgrounds, unclean and unfocused sites, sites that don't use alt tags on images, and it really covers a whole lot of things that are just plain wrong. Way wrong.
He even got into a subject about never including text that says 'Click Here' and at first I scratched by head and thought - but why not?? And he showed some examples of it done right, and examples of how bad and tacky it can look when it is used wrong. I immediately got inspired and got rid of all of my 'Click here' text and sure enough, the results looked much more professional.
I have at least 20 high-maintenance business sites I constantly work on, and that being said - I am constantly feeling pretty positive about the work that I do. He doesn't care how good you think you are. He will be brutal. And it's about time someone steps forward to say it.
'A webmasters job is never complete' is an accurate statement.
He doesn't just give negative criticism... he offers good advice and solutions that are doable and just require effort and a sense of direction.
The bottom line: If you get aggravated with what he says, you can close the book and reopen it when you're ready for brutal honesty.
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Only for beginners and suckers
Rating (2)
Date: 2004-02-02
4 out of 24 customers found this reveiw helpful
This book has a little bit of useful information for anyone above the beginner level. Very little. The book can be repetitive and the bizarre pictures just distract from the content. And the author is not even a graphic designer! I would think that would be a requirement to write a book of this kind. The author is simply not very qualified to write a book on web design.
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by Vincent Flanders, Dean Peters
Product Group: Book
Publisher: Sybex Inc (2002-04-05)
ISBN: 0782140203
EAN: 9780782140200
UPC: 025211440209
Dewy Decimal #: 005.72
Paperback: 320 pages
SKU: 082908016
Condition: Used: Good
Comments: ..moderate cover wear..has cd
More Product Infomation
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Editorial Reviews
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Product Description
From Vincent Flanders, co-author of the best-selling Web Pages That Suck, comes an all-new, irreverent look at the web's worst. Whether you're designing a site for your digital photos or in charge of your Fortune 500 company's web presence, you need to read Flanders take on the many mistakes that undermine some of the best-known sites on the web. Within these full-color pages, you'll: TREMBLE at the horror of Mystery Meat Navigation RUN SCREAMING from splishy splashy Flash pages CONQUER your web nightmares by learning the four guiding principles of smart web design MASTER the art of spotting a page's flaws in two minutes flat Written from the ground up to cover today's biggest web design challenges, Son of Web Pages That Suck also features a CD packed with great utilities to help you design, test, and manage your site, plus links for web-based resources discussed in the book.
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Customer Reviews
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Keeps students interested!
Rating (5)
Date: 2006-06-30
2 out of 2 customers found this reveiw helpful
This book is written in a manner that makes students laugh and want to continue reading. I use it as a class reference book but had to order more as it was regularly checked out. Students use Flanders site along with the Cool Site of the Day website to review sites daily. They then write their own reviews using the guidelines suggested in the book. Design techniques have improved tremendously!
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Great for techno-weenies caught up in features
Rating (4)
Date: 2005-10-04
3 out of 4 customers found this reveiw helpful
This book is fantastic for those of us who know how do code sites all day long but aren't that great at design. I don't know that I will end up buying the book, however. I learned what I needed to from it by borrowing it from the library and taking notes as I went.
What this book made me do was to think about what my users needed to make the page work for them. If you're in e-commerce, you want to know what will help users click to buy. If you're sharing opinion or fact, you want your users to click on the information you have to offer. If they don't read it or won't click on it, you've "lost the sale."
What this book does for me is to help technical people like me be more aware of the asthetics of site design. If my site doesn't have a site map, people who use site maps won't stick around long. If my site doesn't have a search capability, many users will go elsewhere so they can search through a site rather than having to click to find what they want.
I could go on, but SOWPTS does its job very well - it educates users on what doesn't work. It goes beyond it as well by helping us find alternatives to "what sucks" so our pages can reach more of our audience.
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Self Aggrandizement
Rating (1)
Date: 2005-04-09
4 out of 23 customers found this reveiw helpful
If you like Madison Avenue hype you should take to this book sweetly because that's what it's all about,(crass, loud, stupid, repetitive drivel.) To say this author is a hypocrite and a shameless self-promoter would be just stating the obvious to anyone with an IQ above 85. The question is,'Is it entertaining?'. I don't think so although I did find it offensive in many places. Here's one : He thinks Barry White's teeth sparkling on an ad displayed at Amazon.com was racist and offensive but somehow his coined repetitive use of the term 'Mystery Meat' for 'Interactive Navigation' is not. Oh yeah, here's another great quote, 'The only way I'm waiting 9 minutes for a page to load is if I get to see Penelope Cruz in her birthday suit !'. Nothing offensive or sexist about that stupid remark and that's the problem with this book in a nutshell; too much of idiot Flanders and not enough objective content. Like I said if you were a schoolyard bully and really adore Madison Ave. and idiocy then this book will make you smile. I've personally known more sensitive guys on loading docks.
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A webmasters job is never complete
Rating (5)
Date: 2004-07-27
9 out of 9 customers found this reveiw helpful
Ok all I can say is wow. This man uses insults (accurately) to get the job done. I found myself wanting to redo things on my site and other sites I design just so he wouldn't find it and use it as a bad example. Good God. He is RIGHT ON on a lot of that stuff.
I disagreed him with him when it came to Flash. He thinks Flash is unnecessary, which it is in certain circumstances... but... he failed to mention adult sites which really use the art of visualization for the ultimate sale, which is what he discusses - that websites should be about bringing in money. Other than that and his not-so-secret hate for splash pages (although again, he failed to mention that some sites actually REQUIRE them by law)... I agreed with him on everything else in the book.
He gets into the Do's and Don'ts and really blasts the sites that use tacky animated Gifs on clashing backgrounds, unclean and unfocused sites, sites that don't use alt tags on images, and it really covers a whole lot of things that are just plain wrong. Way wrong.
He even got into a subject about never including text that says 'Click Here' and at first I scratched by head and thought - but why not?? And he showed some examples of it done right, and examples of how bad and tacky it can look when it is used wrong. I immediately got inspired and got rid of all of my 'Click here' text and sure enough, the results looked much more professional.
I have at least 20 high-maintenance business sites I constantly work on, and that being said - I am constantly feeling pretty positive about the work that I do. He doesn't care how good you think you are. He will be brutal. And it's about time someone steps forward to say it.
'A webmasters job is never complete' is an accurate statement.
He doesn't just give negative criticism... he offers good advice and solutions that are doable and just require effort and a sense of direction.
The bottom line: If you get aggravated with what he says, you can close the book and reopen it when you're ready for brutal honesty.
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Only for beginners and suckers
Rating (2)
Date: 2004-02-02
4 out of 24 customers found this reveiw helpful
This book has a little bit of useful information for anyone above the beginner level. Very little. The book can be repetitive and the bizarre pictures just distract from the content. And the author is not even a graphic designer! I would think that would be a requirement to write a book of this kind. The author is simply not very qualified to write a book on web design.
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