Selected Product: | Site-Seeing: A Visual Approach to Web Usability Paperback Edition: 1st Author: Luke Wroblewski Publisher: Wiley Release Date: 2002-06-28 ISBN-10: 0764536745 ISBN-13: 9780764536748 List Price: $49.99 Average Customer Rating: | | Communicating Design: Developing Web Site Documentation for Design and Planning ISBN-10: 0321392353 ISBN-13: 9780321392350 List Price:$44.99 The Elements of User Experience: User-Centered Design for the Web (VOICES) ISBN-10: 0735712026 ISBN-13: 9780735712027 List Price:$34.99 The Elements of User Experience: User-Centered Design for the Web ISBN-10: 0735712026 ISBN-13: 0752064712022 List Price:$34.99 PHP for the World Wide Web, Second Edition (Visual QuickStart Guide) ISBN-10: 0321245652 ISBN-13: 0785342245653 List Price:$21.99 PHP for the World Wide Web, Second Edition (Visual QuickStart Guide) ISBN-10: 0321245652 ISBN-13: 9780321245656 List Price:$29.99 Macromedia Flash Professional 8 Hands-On Training ISBN-10: 0321293886 ISBN-13: 9780321293886 List Price:$49.99 |
To use our price comparison to get the cheapest price, please click on the "Find the Cheapest Price" button located above for Site-Seeing: A Visual Approach to Web Usability by Luke Wroblewski (ISBN-10: 0764536745, ISBN-13: 9780764536748). At this time we have not yet written a review for Site-Seeing: A Visual Approach to Web Usability by Luke Wroblewski (ISBN-10: 0764536745, ISBN-13: 9780764536748). Please continue to keep checking back to this page as we are constantly adding reviews. Summaries and Customer Reviews are supplied by Amazon.com Although Web usability has received lots of hype, especially during the dot-com meltdown, the focus has been mostly on technical issues. Usability experts stress the pitfalls of frames and too many images on Web pages. They recommend editing out unnecessary words and writing in a non-linear style-all valuable advice, of course. But less frequently do they highlight the importance of the visual presentation of Web pages. The Web is a communication medium that does most of its talking visually. What you see on a Web page tells you what you might find within the site, how to get there, and why it might interest you-not to mention the instinctive emotional response that shapes your Web experience. As a result, Web usability issues are communication issues. Easy-to-use sites are those that communicate quickly and effectively. Site-Seeing takes a fresh approach to Web usability by applying visual communication principles and decision-making to Web design. Specifically, readers will learn the key concepts behind visual organization, look and feel, technical considerations, and clear planning that stem from audience awareness. Through numerous, full-color examples author Luke Wroblewski deconstructs "the good, the bad, and the ugly" of Web design. The visual presentation of a site does more than merely making it pretty. It organizes information according to function. It creates distinct and appropriate personalities. It provides emotional impact and attachment. In short, it engages the audience-and keeps them coming back. Usability - Physician Heal Thyself | Customer Rating: | To be fair about this, I am not judging the content of the book, but the format of the book is horrific. The author presents concepts for implementing usable web design through a book that seems to ignor hundreds of years of proven usability principles for the printed word. Interesting design, or even attractive design, is not always usable design.
The book looks like an undergraduate graphic design project - and not a successful one at that. While the author may have many good things to say, communication of those points gets lost in the design. His credibility for what he has to say also gets lost, because of the way he presents his information. I purchased this book for about $6 (used), that's a fair price for an example of what not to do. If you want to gain a solid understanding of basic usability principles, start with Steve Krug's "Don't Make Me Think". | Still a 'must have' book four years later. | Customer Rating: | | This is the book to buy after you have two other basic books on web design. As your other books are thrown away or replaced you will still need 'Site-Seeing'. It covers both the history and progress of web design. Read this book in bed or on a plane trip, preferably not in front of a monitor. I also found it helpful not to take the chapters in any formal order. Delve in! You will be helped. To me, this book is so solid that an upgrade is still a couple of years away. | Visual & "wordy" is what makes this book great! | Customer Rating: | | As a fan of Site-Seeing, I must respond to a few of the reviews asserting that the author should have condensed certain material in the book. For me, the many visual examples and the great, detailed explanations (one reviewer suggested "wordy") are exactly what makes this book so useful. Rather than just skimming over important design concepts, the author actually takes the time to properly explain these important principles and illustrate them with examples. In my opinion, many other web design books use only words, whereas in this book, you can actually see and understand what the author is talking about. This is very important to me, as a visual learner. That is just one reason why this book is still on my desk. | Not very usable. | Customer Rating: | | For a web usability book, this one is suprisingly unusable. The book is overdesigned, making it sometimes hard to read because of all the visual clutter on the page. It's also over-wordy. If only the author had taken Steve Krug's advice (which he mis-quotes in the first chapter) to cut out half the words, and then cut out half of what's left, this might have been a great book. As it is, its only contributions are from the design standpoint, such as not breaking the model of the web, and not making the navigation so contrast-y as to visually distract from the content. Otherwise, just about everything he says is said more succinctly in Krug's book, "Don't Make Me Think." | Good info, could be condensed | Customer Rating: | | This book lays a good foundation for web design by emphasizing planning, meeting clients' goals, and understanding the target audience. Wroblewski emphasizes usability when describing the core of the site- structure, navigation, content- and how it will affect the experience of the audience. He uses numerous examples to illustrate layout, visual heirarchy, color schemes, and how they work together (or don't!) to communicate quickly and effectively to the site visitor. I got frustrated about the amount of fluff surrounding actual information. He makes plenty of good points and then buries them beneath a barrage of condescending, long-winded metaphors, like the way we can read a map and know that blue represents water. The analogy itself could be helpful, but three paragraphs to explain the analogy is just distracting. I'm glad I read it... it opened my eyes to many challenges that web designers face, and inspired me to infuse life and personality into my own site. I'm also glad I highlighted the meaningful parts so I (or friends who borrow it) can skip past the fluff in the future. |
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