Made a hopefully helpful guide for web people and students --
Wikipedia main page http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Main_Page
Internet Color Guide http://home.san.rr.com/textright/netcolr.html
Love Mozilla Firebird... no popups, fantastic. Simple, customizable; easy to set up bookmark folders, then open all pages in a folder at once in tabs on a browser bar.
Love Yahoo Mail, incredible spam filtering, plus put in these additional filters (excuse the language, but they work): fuck, sex, teen, to unsubscribe, rather not receive, delete, subscribe, no longer wish, to stop receiving, unsolicited, mortgage, loan. Junk messages drop to near-zero.
Will try this in new G-mail account and see if it works as spam increases.
Work: web design, marketing communications, technical publications.
Webpage: http://home.san.rr.com/textright/
Moved from JonDonahueInfoSmog
I do marketing communications for a tech company, designing ads, brochures, web pages... occasionally a user interface design, and HTML Help programs. And while I love computer graphics -- the rich, transmitted light and color, stained-glass for our times -- I think the bloom is going off the rose as we all drown in a sea of Infosmog.
If all ads are beautiful, do any connect with a public that is trained from birth to recognize ad graphics and tune out?
If everything's in beautiful color, with carefully selected and kerned typefaces, do we lose our ability to take in the selling message?
New ad formula -- better graphics = less communication
full color vs black-and-white
proportional type vs monospaced
All this is before we discuss the message itself, which most often is hype or lies. I'm worrying here about the message presentation -- what can I do, in this new century, to get a person's attention amidst a sea of visual clutter?
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