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5 Ways to Avoid the 1998 Look
by Anthony Stai
If you've looked around at a few websites, you might have noticed that
many of them look absolutely terrible. In many cases, this is because
they were produced in the early days of the web's mainstream
popularity, but they haven't been maintained or updated since. The
chances are that their creators have never even looked at them in a
modern browser, and don't realise just how bad they look now. These
websites have an affliction I like to call the '1998 look' –
but, unfortunately for you, even new sites aren't altogether immune to
it. Here, then, are five ways to avoid becoming a victim.
1. Don't Use Animated GIFs.
The animated GIF is dead. It was a charming idea, once, letting us
include animations on our pages as easily as normal graphics. Now,
though, it looks extremely dated thanks to the small number of colours
used, not to mention jarring and out-of-place. It's even worse if you
use one of those early-web 'stock animations', like that spinning @
symbol to represent sending email – there are very few things
that look more amateurish.
If you don't want to look like you don't know what you're doing, stay
away from animated GIFs.
2. Text in Graphics.
Unless it's your logo or possibly a heading, don't type text in
Photoshop or Paint Shop Pro, save it as an image, and then put it on
your site. It's supremely silly, and gives you no benefit whatsoever
– not only does it make the text take much longer to
download, but it also stops people from selecting it or doing anything
else they might want to do with it. Not to mention that text created
this way is usually aligned badly and compressed so that it looks even
worse than it would usually.
Keep your text as plain text, and use graphics for pictures. Text as a
graphic is almost always bad.
3. Bad Backgrounds.
It's amazing that people still do it, but there are plenty of websites
out there still with absolutely disastrous backgrounds. Either they'll
have a colour that doesn't provide enough contrast with the text,
making the text unreadable, or, even worse, they'll have a small
pattern, tiled to fill the entire background. Wallpaper-style patterns
are one of the most 1998 things in existence, and instantly make your
website look like a joke, not to mention often making it entirely
unusable.
So what should you use as a background colour? In almost all cases, the
answer to the question is white – but, if you really want a
colour, make sure it's a restrained background colour that people can
still read your text over. If you're using a pattern, don't repeat it
more than once.
4. System Requirements.
Listing system requirements on your website is no longer fashionable,
and thank goodness for that. In the bad old days, sites would write
things like "best viewed at 800x600 using Internet Explorer 4". Did
they really think people were going to switch, just to view their
website? It acted like a disclaimer, saying they couldn't be bothered
to make the site look good for everyone, and anyone using something
unusual had no right to complain. It was, quite simply, terrible.
The end of the Internet Explorer/Netscape war thankfully consigned
these messages to history, for the most part, but there are still some
sites that have them. Don't let your site be one – it does
nothing but make you look hopelessly out of touch.
5. Open in New Window.
Finally, there's this one, back from the days when graphic designers
were just starting to get to grips with the web and wanted exact
control over everything, including the size of the web browser. Going
to a site would give you a message like 'click here to launch', and the
site would then try to open a new window automatically, with none of
the browser's toolbars.
This technique has always been bad (it takes away too much control from
the user), but it's even worse now that so many users have pop-up
blockers thanks to the abuse of pop-ups for advertising. If you design
your site this way, many people will have trouble seeing it, including
people with the latest version of Internet Explorer. Don't do it.
About
The Author:
Anthony Stai invites you to
take your
website to the next level. Get one of the best Search Engine
Optimization (SEO) books on the market for Free! Learn the techniques
that differentiate the amateurs from the pros. Get your book at http://www.makemoneyonline4you.com/seo.html
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