Minimalist
Web design lost favor as a design technique back in the early days of Netscape.
No matter how many times I have told people that the information is in
the text, a picture is not worth 1,000 words on the Web. The "keep
it simple" mantra was lost to the world as flashy, blinking, dancing babies
took over our Web design universe.
The former
"Web
Site Journal" contained an article on Web site design for PalmPilots,
cell phones, and other small devices. It proposed that going back to the
days of designing Web pages for text-only
browsers like Lynx may be the best alternative.
After all these years, it turns out that, in addition to frames being evil
(everyone knows they're the spawn of the devil, right?), tables are also
bad.
For
an example of a Web site specifically designed for rapid loading and text-friendliness,
take a look at Filmpros,
the Arizona Online Film Production Directory, where producers acquire film
production resources while working in Arizona. Many of these people use
laptop computers to access this site, but in the future they will be just
as likely to use their cellular phones, PalmPilots, or other handheld devices.
Now
is the time to be thinking about what your
pages will look like on a 1.28-inch screen.
Motorola recently announced that all of their cell phones will provide
Internet access by next year, and Cisco Systems and Motorola have announced
a wireless Internet project. Motorola's Piano
Project and Sun Microsystems' Jini
will make it even easier to connect these devices. Access to the Internet
on small devices is going to become ubiquitous
soon, and we all need to be designing
for it.