>
>
>(As a side note, it's interesting how website layout has sort of
>stabilized. An awful lot of sites have very similar layouts, and not
>just in the Open Source community. Reminds me of how automobile cockpit
>layout has stabilized over the decades.)
>  
>
I personally think this is sad. There is no reason a Slash or PHPNuke 
(or PostNuke; I'd forgotten about PostNuke) site should like like a 
Slashdot knockoff. Reality = a whole lot of people seem to have a 
thought process that goes like, "Slashdot is successful, so if I make my 
site look like Slashdot it too will be successful." This is obviously no 
more true in Web site design than it is in music, where bands that 
"cover" others' work rarely make it beyond the local bar no matter how 
well they play.
There are many, many things that can be done to make a Web site unique 
and interesting without exotic technology or plugins, but not enough 
people are trying to produce truly original, striking work on the WWW.
UF professor Mindy Mcadam's http://mindy.mcadams.com is an example of an 
interesting-looking site made with nothing but simple HTML and a little 
javascript. http://plastic.com is a  Slash site that looks nothing like 
Slashdot.
More people need to realize that highly successful sites tend to be 
originals rather than copies, just as highly successful musicians 
perform original works, not copies.
I could write a whole book about this.
Wait! I did.
It's called "The Habits of Highly Successful Internet Companies" and 
it'll be out from Financial Times Press in September. 
(BuildProfitsOnline.com will be the book's companion Web site.)
- Robin
This archive was generated by hypermail 2.1.3 : Fri Aug 01 2014 - 19:10:35 EDT