Rating:  Summary: Quite Helpful In Web Design Review: This book has really helped me a lot in developing my website http://a-itindia.com. I really appreciate the author's work out for we India based web design firms. Istrongly recommend you this book for your web design needs in the real world. Thanking you.
Rating:  Summary: Short, easy and must-read book for all Web developers Review: This book is a short, easy and must-read book for all Web developers. It does not cover any particular technology or language, but offers a host of tips and advices on how to make a Web site user-friendly and effective. To an experienced Web surfer, the advice is often obvious and based on common sense, but some tips are derived from actual observations of the Internet experience in such matters as site navigation, form filling, and shopping. The authors are members of 37signals, a team of Web design and usability experts with clients as Microsoft, quest, and Monster.com. Their book is loaded with examples of good and bad examples of Web pages or features. It ends with a Contingency Design checklist that can be used to evaluate a site and to plan for change should it be needed.
Rating:  Summary: Don't design (or update) your web site without this book Review: This book is one of the best books on web site design I've read - and I've read quite a few. New and experienced web masters will find a plethora of tips and techniques covering every facet from how to display error messages that are both meaningful and don't get lost on the page, to ensuring that search engines on your site actually return relevant information to search queries.The topics covered are covered intelligently and in detail, and address the most common weaknesses found on too many web sites. Moreover, every topic is reinforced with examples from actual and well-known web sites. Specific areas of web site design include: - Show the Problem (crafting visible and informative error messages) - Language Matters (excellent tips on writing content that is descriptive, short and gets attention) - Bulletproof Forms (take the confusion out of filling in forms and validate data) - Missing in Action (go beyond 404 messages, and how to enhance the visitor experience even if they are using older browsers or are missing needed plug-ins) - Lend a Helping Hand (creating help that is ... well, helpful) - Get Out of the Way (how to find and eliminate stuff that slows down page loading, detracts from the main content, or alienate visitors) - Search and Rescue (tips for making your site search engine give visitors relevant information instead of dumping everything under the sun in response to a query) - Out of Stocks and Unavailable Items (best practices in stock management if you are selling items on the site) - Contingency Design (a strategy for continuous improvement) What I most like about this book is the fact that it isn't based on some rigid design philosophy, but instead, is a compendium of design issues commonly found on major sites - and how to make sure your site doesn't have them. Most of the items covered are the very ones that are likely to irritate you when you encounter them on someone else's site. The elegant solutions given in this book can serve as a checklist of what to consider when you're designing or improving your own site. If I had to recommend only one book on site design to new web masters this would be it.
Rating:  Summary: Excellent quick study that will help avoid costly mistakes. Review: Whether you are a professional or hobby or volunteer web designer, this book will help. I won't repeat what the previous reviewer has written, Defensive Design for the Web covers a complete variety of important design issues for any site -- from the basic information site to online commerce and more. This isn't your typical web design book. The layout of this book makes it extremely easy to study with visual guides for each example. And once you've read through it, you'll want to keep it right next to your other valuable references. This book has been long overdue.
Rating:  Summary: Surprises in perception Review: While reading this book many experienced web designers will dismiss it as a collection of obvious techniques. Don't be fooled by that perception. I gave this book to my team with a mandate that it serve as a framework for usability for all corporate intranet projects. I was immediately deluged with protests from a few team members claiming "we already do this". Skeptical, I sat with those who made the claims, and we compared our techniques against those this excellent book proposes using live web pages on our intranet. Surprise. We did not measure up, and were certainly not "already doing this". Phase two, I had one member of my team reengineer one of the smaller internal web sites on our intranet using the techniques given in this book. Business users gave the results high marks, and my team began accepting the book as the official usability guide. Result: this book has made a measurable difference in the quality of internal web sites we are designing and deploying for various lines of business within our corporation. It is now embraced by my team, and is used as a standard of good practice in web usability. The advice provided in the book has also resulted in less support calls to our team, freeing them to work on design and deployment instead of answering end user questions. Moral: do not let the surface simplicity of this book fool you. While its contents and advice may seem obvious, chances are that your team is not following those obvious design rules.
Rating:  Summary: Surprises in perception Review: While reading this book many experienced web designers will dismiss it as a collection of obvious techniques. Don't be fooled by that perception. I gave this book to my team with a mandate that it serve as a framework for usability for all corporate intranet projects. I was immediately deluged with protests from a few team members claiming "we already do this". Skeptical, I sat with those who made the claims, and we compared our techniques against those this excellent book proposes using live web pages on our intranet. Surprise. We did not measure up, and were certainly not "already doing this". Phase two, I had one member of my team reengineer one of the smaller internal web sites on our intranet using the techniques given in this book. Business users gave the results high marks, and my team began accepting the book as the official usability guide. Result: this book has made a measurable difference in the quality of internal web sites we are designing and deploying for various lines of business within our corporation. It is now embraced by my team, and is used as a standard of good practice in web usability. The advice provided in the book has also resulted in less support calls to our team, freeing them to work on design and deployment instead of answering end user questions. Moral: do not let the surface simplicity of this book fool you. While its contents and advice may seem obvious, chances are that your team is not following those obvious design rules.
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