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         Web Publishing Usability:     more books (24)
  1. Qualität im Web: Benutzerfreundliche Webseiten durch Usability Evaluation (X.media.press) by Werner Schweibenz, Frank Thissen, 2002-12-09
  2. The Flash Usability Guide: Interacting with Flash MX by Chris MacGregor, Peter Pinch, et all 2003-07-01
  3. Usability: Nutzerfreundliches Web-Design (X.media.press)
  4. Crafting Multimedia Text: Websites and Presentations (NetEffect) (NetEffect Series) by Barbara Moran, 2004-07-22
  5. Flash 99% Good: A Guide to Macromedia Flash Usability
  6. Flash Application Design Solutions: The Flash Usability Handbook (Solutions) by Ka Wai Cheung, Craig Bryant, 2006-02-27
  7. Skip Intro: Flash Usability and Interface Design by Duncan McAlester, Michelangelo Capraro, 2002-04-11
  8. E-Commerce Usability: Tools and Techniques to Perfect the On-Line Experience by David Travis, 2002-12-05
  9. Designing Web Usability. by Jakob Nielsen, 2000
  10. Homepage Usability (Swedish Edition) by Jacob Nielsen, 2002-03-27

21. Support And Training For Web Publishing
C C Client Services supports UW web publishing services through online and web Site usability Testing. UW Publications Services web publishing
http://www.washington.edu/computing/web/publishing/help.html
Search Directories Reference Tools UW Home ... Web Publishing
Support and Training for Web Publishing
Support
Web Publishing FAQ
UW Publications Services Web Publishing

UW Publications Services Web Publishing offers Web design, development, programming, and consultation for Web-based projects of any scale.
The CTLT serves faculty, staff, and instructors at no cost. Drop by for one-to-one consultation on educational technology and Web site development. Hardware and software is available on a first come, first served basis. Support is also available online at catalyst.washington.edu
Training
HTML and Web Training
From Web fundamentals to Web programming, UW Computer Training offers many courses designed for beginning and advanced Web publishing techniques. A service provided by
help@cac.washington.edu Modified: August 5, 2005

22. WDVL: Tutorials For Web Developers - Usability
Designing web usability Part 1 New Riders publishing From content and page design to designing for ease of navigation and users with disabilities,
http://www.wdvl.com/Authoring/Tutorials/usability.html

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  • Web Developer's Virtual Library: Encyclopedia of Web Design Tutorials, Articles and Discussions JavaScript Tutorial for Programmers Design JavaScript Tutorial for Programmers - Objects ... Authoring JavaScript
  • Domain Name Lookup Search to find the availability of a domain name. Just enter the complete domain name with extension (.com, .net, .edu)
    Tutorials for Web Developers - Usability
    Make certain that your Web sites are "user-friendly".
    Designing Web Usability: Part 1 New Riders Publishing
    From content and page design to designing for ease of navigation and users with disabilities, Jakob Nielsen delivers complete direction on how to connect with any Web user, in any situation. This is the first installment of Chapter 4, excerpted from Designing Web Usability published by New Riders Publishing.

    23. WDVL: Web Site Design
    Designing web usability Part 7 New Riders publishing June 22, 2001 A Common Sense Approach to web usability New Riders publishing June 14, 2001
    http://www.wdvl.com/Authoring/Design/

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  • Web Developer's Virtual Library: Encyclopedia of Web Design Tutorials, Articles and Discussions JavaScript Tutorial for Programmers Design JavaScript Tutorial for Programmers - Objects ... Authoring JavaScript
  • Domain Name Lookup Search to find the availability of a domain name. Just enter the complete domain name with extension (.com, .net, .edu)
    Web Site Design
    Design the act of working out the form of something; an arrangement scheme; a decorative or artistic work; the creation of something in the mind "You can design for all of the people some of the time. You can design for some of the people all of the time. But you can't design for all of the people all of the time." (William Hudson with apologies to Abraham Lincoln) Many elements go into successful Web site design; we can cluster those elements into sensory, conceptual, and reactive aspects. That is, design isn't only what you see, it's also what you think and feel as you navigate a Web site.

    24. Web Publishing Benefits - Information Architects And Usability Experts | LiveSTO
    liveSTORYBOARD CMS is the simple, flexible and powerful web content management service that facilitates web content creation and publishing for individuals
    http://www.livestoryboard.com/Benefits/CMS-benefits-by-role/benefits-for-informa

    You are here: Benefits Benefits by Role For Information Architects
    Web Publishing Benefits of liveSTORYBOARD CMS for Information Architects and Usability Experts
    10 ways Information Architects take advantage of liveSTORYBOARD CMS
  • Web wireframes, storyboards, prototypes, navigable mockups - whatever you call them - now you can build them quickly and easily in fully navigable (X)HTML. Share them with your team on liveSTORYBOARD staging environments, refine and republish in minutes. Tap into the benefits of separating content and presentation by quickly communicating ideas with your team through semantic markup styled with CSS Don't throw away your storyboard work - set up the road map and let content contributors add content, designers - styling, developers - code. Implement your ideas faster. With liveSTORYBOARD you can introduce a site-wide usability improvement with a couple of clicks. Concentrate on your priorities through separation of concerns Ensure the lasting results of your hard work - often IA professionals recommend best practices that get lost in the implementation or are implemented inconsistently because of deadlines, communication barriers, conflicting interests between team members. liveSTORYBOARD CMS will ensure the consistent architecture, look and feel, and function of your sites. Do more for your team.
  • 25. Web Publishing At UIC
    web publishing on an ACCC web server requires an account on the machine that it Accessibility and usability Making web pages accessible to people with
    http://www.uic.edu/depts/accc/webpub/
    A CADEMIC C OMPUTING and C OMMUNICATIONS C ENTER Web Publishing at UIC Contents 1. Overview 2. For Beginners 3. Advanced Topics A. Related Links B. FAQ
    Web Publishing at UIC: Overview
    Want to know more about the Web and Web Surfing? See Intro to Web Surfing and Searching . It has links to introductory and survey sites on Web and Web surfing topics, including a number of FAQs (Frequently Asked Questions). Everyone at UIC is welcome to publish on the Web, either personal pages or pages for official departmental or classroom use. Commercial use is not allowed. The ACCC runs Web servers (known as www.uic.edu and www2.uic.edu) on its central UNIX machines (tigger and icarus, respectively). Web publishing on an ACCC Web server requires an account on the machine that it runs on. (There are other Web servers on campus, in Math and EECS, for example. Except for the general how-to information, including many of the links on the Help and Related Links page, the instructions in these pages are specific to the ACCC Web service on tigger and icarus.) In the Beginning All you need is an account on tigger or icarus and a little knowledge of the mechanics: how HTML works, and where to put your files.

    26. ACCC Help With Web Publishing
    site on usability. materials for the ACCC seminar web Page Graphic Design And a whole bunch more ACCC web publishing seminars; see the ACCC
    http://www.uic.edu/depts/accc/webpub/webhelp.html
    A CADEMIC C OMPUTING and C OMMUNICATIONS C ENTER Web Publishing at UIC Contents 1. Overview 2. For Beginners 3. Advanced Topics A. Related Links B. FAQ
    Web Publishing Related Links
    HTML and Web Publishing Basics Want to know more about the Web and Web Surfing? See Intro to Web Surfing and Searching . It has links to introductory and survey sites on Web and Web surfing topics, including a number of FAQs (Frequently Asked Questions).

    27. Denison Web Publishing Guidelines
    Jakob Nielsen, a foremost expert on web usability, has said, web users are Biweekly web publishing tutorials offered all year except May and December.
    http://www.denison.edu/websrv/guidelines.html
    HOME CALENDAR DIRECTORY ADMISSIONS ... SEARCH
    Computing: Web Services
    Comserv Home Contact Us Services Facilities ... Getting Help DRAFT - Thursday, 01-Jul-2004 16:14:39 EDT
    Web Publishing Guidelines
    Introduction
    Who should read these guidelines?
    This document is intended for any person who publishes or modifies Web documents on the Denison webserver. It is also important for anyone who oversees or approves written or visual content published on the Denison website. Finally, it is important for any person who advises others about Web publishing methodology, technology, or techniques. Those who should consider reading this document are:
    • Denison division heads, department chairs, office supervisors, and organization leadership. Official Denison office, department, project or organization pagemaintainers. Denison users who wish to publish effective, high-quality and usable websites. Library personnel, Computer Support Service Technicians (SSTs), Instructional Technologists (ITs) and other Computing Services staff who provide support to Denison computer users with Web publishing tasks.
    Index
    Why do we have these guidelines?

    28. Computing Services Tutorials
    web Design usability. Philip and Alex s Guide to web publishing by Philip Greenspun is an awesome introduction to providing effective web services.
    http://www.denison.edu/computing/tutorials.html
    HOME CALENDAR DIRECTORY ADMISSIONS ... SEARCH
    Computing Services
    Comserv Home Contact Us Services Facilities ... Search Comserv
    Training Opportunities
    Training offered by Web Services

    29. W3C Journal
    usability engineering techniques can create more usable web sites by many web usability issues, such as limitations and constraints for web publishing
    http://www.w3journal.com/5/s3.instone.html
    [PREVIOUS] [NEXT] [TOC]
    Usability Engineering
    for the Web
    Keith Instone
    Abstract
    As ease of use becomes more important than being "cool" on the World Wide Web, usability engineering techniques will let developers create more usable Web sites by helping them know their audience, valuating their user interfaces, and redesigning their sites based on user feedback. Understanding the tradeoffs between standards and new Web technologies is essential in creating usable sites.
    Introduction
    The ability to be "cool" on the World Wide Web that is, taking advantage of the latest and greatest featureshas been an important factor for those who want to stand out from the crowd. Lately, however, users have made it clear that it's not enough to simply use the newest technologies, such as frames, JavaScript, animated GIFs, or Shockwave. Many sites have been forced to provide alternatives to their frame designs because visitors have found them too hard to use [1]. Usability engineering techniques can create more usable Web sites by helping developers focus on the users rather than the technology. Understanding users' needs and the tasks they are trying to accomplish is steadily becoming more important than adopting the latest whiz-bang feature. Of course, if the latest technology fulfills a need, it should be used; but incorporating this technology just to be cool is becoming less and less acceptable. In the very competitive world of the Web, usability will become crucial to the survival of sites (and their corresponding businesses). The value of usability engineering was put in perspective when Robert Hertzberg

    30. Web Development At UTHSC-H
    acquiring and sharing new web publishing and usability skills;. implementing best practices in school/departmental web presence;
    http://www.uthouston.edu/graphicguide/web/development.html
    UTHSC-H Home Contact Us People Directory Maps ... Colors and Fonts Roles and Responsibilities
    Web Content Owner The Web Content Owner is responsible for:
    • ensuring the accuracy and timeliness of the content presented; regularly updating and keeping published content current; approving final content for Web pages.
    Web Author The Web Author is responsible for:
    • offering site visitors pages that represent professional design and quality presentation; responding in a timely fashion to inquiries and comments concerning the published material.
    Web Publisher The Web Publisher is responsible for:
    • approving final content architecture, design and coding for all Web pages published within their area.
    Web Site Owner The Web Site Owner is responsible for:
    • directing and controlling the Web pages and materials posted to a particular site on a university server ; approving access rights to sub-folders or directories within the server space.
    Web Developers Group Web Developers Group Steering Team The Steering Team is responsible for:
    • acquiring and sharing new Web publishing and usability skills;

    31. Web Resources For UTHSC-H Web Publishers
    A web site maintained by usability guru Jakob Nielsen. The web publishing Accessibility Wizard for Microsoft ® Office offers an alternative to the
    http://www.uthouston.edu/graphicguide/web/resources.html
    UTHSC-H Home Contact Us People Directory Maps ... Colors and Fonts These are just a few of a multitude of accessibility resources on the Web. Some have costs associated and some are free. Most have a free download demo to try. If you have any resources you use that are not listed here, please contact Jennifer Canup have it added to the list. General Accessibility Sites WebAIM (Web Accessibility In Mind)
    Should be your first source for Web Accessibility. The site not only offers links to other resources, but maintains current information regarding techniques and concepts, training, reviews of products information and discussion groups. UseIt
    A Web site maintained by usability guru Jakob Nielsen. This link points various aspects of accessibility/usability issues. This is a very informative site for all aspects of Web development from accessibility to navigation concepts. Web XACT by Watchfire (formerly known as Bobby)
    A free service that allows you to test web pages and help expose and repair barriers to accessibility and encourage compliance with existing accessibility guidelines, such as Section 508 and the W3C's WCAG.

    32. A Framework For Organizing Web Usability Guidelines
    If web usability guidelines can play an important role for ensuring usability PIENet web publishing Standards and Guidelines, Australian Department of
    http://www.tri.sbc.com/hfweb/scapin/Scapin.html

    A Framework for Organizing Web Usability Guidelines
    Dominique Scapin and Corinne Leulier
    Dominique.Scapin@inria.fr
    Corinne.Leulier@inria.fr
    Institut National de Recherche en Informatique et en Automatique
    Web: http://www.inria.fr/Dominique.Scapin
    vanderdonckt@qant.ucl.ac.be
    mariage@qant.ucl.ac.be
    Web: http://www.qant.ucl.ac.be/membres/jv Christian Bastien
    Christian.Bastien@ergo-info.univ-paris5.fr

    Web: http://www.univ-paris5.fr/LEI
    Farenc@univ-tlse1.fr
    Philippe.Palanque@univ-tlse1.fr Remi.Bastide@univ-tlse1.fr
    Web: http://lis.univ-tlse1.fr/~farenc/ http://lis.univ-tlse1.fr/palanque/ http://lis.univ-tlse1.fr/bastide/
    Abstract
    If web usability guidelines can play an important role for ensuring usability when designing and evaluating web sites, the moment and the way to use them still remain unclear. To address this problem, one goal of the EvalWeb research project was to come up with a general framework of web usability guidelines helping people to structure the way they are working with such guidelines.
    Introduction
    Usability required for use of web sites is today widely recognized as an important requirement for user acceptance. This requirement becomes more critical for web sites where concurrence is hard. For instance, for electronic commerce web sites: a customer unsatisfied by poor usability is likely to become a competitor’s customer. On the other hand, the user population is expanding in age (ranging from young users to elderly people), in expectations (ranging from private use for leisure to professional use), in information needs (ranging from simple information to compound multimedia resources), in task types (ranging from basic text searches to complex problem-solving methods), and in user abilities (ranging from the able-bodied person to any person with special needs, such as for motor?, auditory- or visually-impaired persons). Web sites should accommodate all these variations over time.

    33. Automatic Tools For Web Usability Evaluation:
    The research on web usability and accessibility guidelines WAI, 1999; Designing web usability the practice of semplicity, New Riders publishing, 1999.
    http://www.tri.sbc.com/hfweb/brajnik/hfweb-brajnik.html
    Automatic web usability evaluation:
    what needs to be done?
    Giorgio Brajnik
    Dipartimento di Matematica e Informatica
    giorgio@dimi.uniud.it
    Abstract
    Website redesign and maintenance are likely to absorb more and more resources as web technologies and uses keep evolving at the current pace. Usability evaluation methods need to be run after each change in order to ensure a decent quality level. The means to control the complexity and cost of website maintenance lies in tools performing automatic usability evaluations. I present a survey of tools that analyze websites, illustrating what kind of automatic tests they perform and which usability factors the tests are more closely related to. The survey then leads to an analysis of the still remaining gaps and of research openings.
    1. Introduction
    It is well known that the average quality of websites is poor, “lack of navigability” being the #1 cause of user dissatisfaction [Fleming, 1998; Nielsen, 1999]. On the one hand web technologies evolve extremely fast, enabling sophisticated tools to be deployed and complex interactions to take place. Secondly, the life cycle of a website is also extremely fast: maintenance of a website is performed at a rate that is higher than that of other software products because of market pressure and lack of distribution barriers. In addition, often the scope of maintenance becomes so wide that a complete redesign takes place. On the other hand, the quality of a website is rooted on its usability, which usually results from the adoption of user-centered development and evaluation approaches [Newman and Lamming, 1994; Fleming, 1998; Rosenfeld and Morville, 1998; Nielsen, 1999]. Usability testing is thus a necessary and repeated step during the life-cycle of a website.

    34. InformationWeek.com
    InternetWeek web publishing Send Us Your Feedback On the web, users first experience the usability of a site and then buy something.
    http://www.informationweek.com/773/web.htm

    Windows News
    NEW! MicrosoftToday John Foley's Blog ... Small Business January 14, 2000
    Printer ready Web-Site Usability:
    Usability On The Web Isn't A Luxury

    On the Internet, it's survival of the easiest: If customers can't find a product, they can't buy it. It's cheaper to increase the design budget than the ad budget, and attention to usability can increase the percentage of Web-site visitors who complete a purchase. By Jakob Nielsen and Donald A. Norman Related links:
  • sidebar: Walk-Through: A Usability Experiment
  • sidebar: Get The Right Answers From Testing And from our sister publications:
  • EETimes Panel predicts a dot.com revolution for design
  • InternetWeek Web Publishing
    Send Us Your Feedback he Web puts user experience of the site first, purchase and payment second. On the Web, users first experience the usability of a site and then buy something. Give users a good experience and they're apt to turn into frequent and loyal customers. But the Web also offers low switching costs; it's easy to turn to another supplier in the face of even a minor hiccup. Only if a site is extremely easy to use will anybody bother staying around. The real difference between a person's behavior on the Web and in the physical world of real stores involves switching costshow much effort it takes to switch from one vendor to another. In a physical store, the costs of switching are high. The person has driven to the store, entered the building, and walked deep into the interior. Even when faced with dwindling supplies, inattentive or rude salespeople, and lines at the checkout counter, the purchaser is apt to stick with it. The cost of leaving, going to another store, and then possibly encountering the same behavior is usually not worth the effort. Of course, in the physical world, many people then never return.
  • 35. CIC: TechForum2005
    Title web usability at the University of Minnesota. Abstract webbased self-service Title Illinois Accessible web publishing Wizard for MS Office
    http://www.cic.uiuc.edu/groups/CIOTechForumPlanningCommittee/archive/ConferenceP
    o
    Planning Committee Members

    Conference Contacts:
    Karen Partlow
    Assistant Director for Tech. Collaboration
    CIC
    Galen Rafferty
    IT Specialist
    CIC
    graffert@uiuc.edu

    Topic: Web Usability (Two Presentations) Moderator: Brian Rust, Communications Manager, University of Wisconsin-Madison Presentation 1 Title: Web Usability at the University of Minnesota Presentation Slides Video 1 (44 MB) Video 2 (39 MB) Abstract: Presenter: Alice de la Cova Job Title: Usability Services Manager in the Office of Information Technology Institution: University of Minnesota Presentation 2 Title: Illinois Accessible Web Publishing Wizard for MS Office Presentation Slides Abstract: Presenter: Jon Gunderson Job Title: Coordinator Institution: University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

    36. WDVL: Designing Web Usability
    This manuscript is Chapter 4 Site Design from the New Riders publishing book Designing web usability. Look at the web as you ve never seen it before,
    http://wdvl.internet.com/Authoring/Design/Usability/

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    Designing Web Usability
    New Riders Publishing May 4, 2001 This manuscript is Chapter 4 Site Design from the New Riders Publishing book Designing Web Usability Look at the Web as you've never seen it before, through the eyes of the average user. Users experience the usability of a site before they have committed to using it and before they have spent any money on potential purchases. The Web is the ultimate environment for empowerment. He or she who clicks the mouse decides everything. In this landmark design reference, the world's acknowledged authority on Web usability, Jakob Nielsen, shares with you the full weight of his wisdom and experience. From content and page design to designing for ease of navigation and users with disabilities, Jakob Nielsen delivers complete direction on how to connect with any Web user, in any situation.

    37. MIT IS&T: Web Publishing Reference - Usability Guidelines
    MIT IS T web publishing Reference usability Guidelines.
    http://web.mit.edu/ist/web/reference/guidelines/usability.html
    Home Site Map Search Advanced Search
    Web Reference home
    MIT Guidelines Web Guidelines ...
    Accessibility Guidelines

    Usability Guidelines
    MIT Graphic Identity
    Creating Web Pages Using MIT Web Space web.mit.edu Resources ... Training Search the Web Reference:
    Usability Guidelines
    Web sites should comply with usability guidelines found on the Usability@MIT website http://web.mit.edu/ist/usability/ Usability is a measure of the site's effectiveness in delivering information to its specified audience. It should be considered at the planning stage and validated throughout the site design and development process. Usability considerations impact site architecture, user interface design and content development. WCS consultants in collaboration with the Usability group can assist in determining appropriate planning strategies and testing points for a given project.
    Elements and Guidelines to Consider Navigation Current location within the site is shown clearly. Link to the site's main page is clearly identified. Major/important parts of the site are directly accessible from the main page. Site map is provided for a large, complex site.

    38. Web Site Development Information, Good Site Design Practices
    Cascading Style Sheets (CSS), Accessibility, usability, and web Standardization. web publishing, Hints for web Authors is replete with solid
    http://goodpractices.com/
    Kode Host Web Solutions - Hosting, Design, Ecommerce Solutions – www.kodehost.co.uk Homepage ~ HyperText Markup Language Design and Style Cascading Style Sheets Additional Resources
    Web Site Development Information
    Try these Web authoring resources and tips and my three-pronged Pitchfork Approach to Web authoring:
    • choose a design standard for your pages like 'world wide accessibility' versus something less universal. test, test, test.. to make sure your design features degrade gracefully in diverse web browsing environments and screen configurations. use commonly accepted good site design practices
    (If you write articles on Web authoring and need a stable storage location for your articles, GoodPractices will publish/archive qualifying articles here at no charge. Please contact the editor.)
    Top Ten Resources
    Designing For Multiple Browsers Without Being Bland
    A concise, sober, and BRIEF description of a good Web authoring strategy. Other fine articles by the author include What You See is Not What Others Get and Widen Your Web Site's Audience . Stephen Traub.
    Getting Started with HTML
    A primer to Learning HTML 3.2 by Examples

    39. Web Guidelines - Accessibility Policy
    web Accessibility and usability Testing For each university web site, Refer to the web publishing Guidelines for further information. For Help
    http://www.utexas.edu/web/guidelines/accessibility.html
    Quick Links UT Home Current Students Faculty Prospective Students Staff About UT Academics Around Austin Athletics Community Outreach Computing Employment Graduate Studies International Programs Research Support UT Calendars UT Direct UT Directory UT Offices A-Z UT Search UT Site Map UTOPIA UT Directory UT Offices A-Z UT Site Map Calendars ... Typography and Fonts
    Web Accessibility Policy
    It is the policy of The University of Texas at Austin that all official University information published on University Web sites shall be accessible to all users. The University has adopted the access standards of Section 508 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973, as amended, and therefore all Web pages containing official University information that are built, updated or revised after the effective date of this policy must comply with Section 508 requirements. Section 508 establishes only a minimum standard for accessibility and Web pages; developers are encouraged to go beyond the minimum whenever possible.
    Web Accessibility and Usability Testing
    To ensure that University Web sites are designed with consideration for the different types of Internet connections available, Web developers are responsible for testing their Web sites for accessibility and usability. The University's

    40. ITS: Web Services
    Technology Training Voicemail Virus Protection web publishing Wireless References Style Guides usability web Editors web Widgets
    http://www.wesleyan.edu/its/web/
    E-Mail HelpDesk Printing Technology Training ... Wireless WEB PUBLISHING Overview Academic Departments Administrative Departments Course Web Sites ... Web Widgets
    Overview of Wesleyan's Web Services
    Wesleyan provides a rich set of services and technologies to support the use of the Web to advance the goals of the Wesleyan community. This Web Site is designed to help explain these various services and technologies. It is arranged first by the type of Web Site and then by technology and service.
    Types of Web Sites
    • Academic Department Web Site
      Academic departments can build and sustain attractive and useful Web sites that can provide up-to-date information about faculty, curriculum, and policy, as well as procedures for prospective and current students and faculty. Administrative Department Web Site
      Administrative departments are increasingly using the Web as their primary communication channel to the constituents that they serve. Course Web Site
      Faculty can build media-rich, interactive Web sites for their courses. Personal Web Site
      Everyone at Wesleyan has space to create their own personal Web site.

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