April 30, 2009
Overlapping social events in the tech scene is beginning to become an issue for Nashville’s geek community and I suppose I should be glad that there are an over abundance of things to do rather than complain that I now have choices.
But when one of those meetups remains ignorant enough to overlap events on purpose, well, I guess that speaks to the heart of what kind of meetup group it actually is. I’m talking about the faux community “Digital Nashville” (Here start-eth the Flame War).
Digital Nashville has taken it upon themselves to schedule their event at the exact same time as the Centre{source} Mixer, which has always been well communicated and began their regular monthly meetups in January. Therefore I can say with a bit of authority that the information about the c{s} Mixer gathering, which typically has a pretty good turn out, is not hard to find. I can also say that there is some spill over so that the same people attending the Mixer are also involved in the Digital Nashville meetup.
But they chose to remain ignorant and schedule their event on the same day despite having at least a month to preplan. I know this because I got a message from the “Digital-Nash Ville” Facebook account. Apparently they are also ignorant of starting a Facebook group managed by real people (that is, actual people without hyphens in their names). Do you really want to attend a DIGITAL event that’s been organized by folks who don’t know how to use Facebook properly?
I’m just saying, If I were to recommend a choice between the two, I’d go with the Mixer.
[/END_Flame War]
4 Comments |
Flame On, Meetups, Social Media | Tagged: centresource, Digital-Nash Ville, Fail, Meetup, Nashville, Overlapping Digital Events |
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Posted by Tom Cheredar
December 12, 2008
I was in the middle of writing a post about how the science of reading has completely changed when viewing information through a web browser, when I asked my friend Marcus about wztv.com and his response was the letter I posted yesterday. I felt like it just deserved it’s own post because it tastefully highlighted why most people have very little understanding of how eyes read a news web page. I’ve since revised my own article to highlight four unforgivable sins committed by news web sites…

Four Design Sins of Local News Sites:
The most important thing to understand is that a news site bears very little relationship to a print layout. I am correct on this if only because if I was wrong, we’d not be talking about this issue and instead we’d all be reading PDF files of our favorite publications. There are plenty examples of local news who site borrow elements from the print school of logic — and very rarely do these elements translate positively to their new medium.
Multiple Columns: Perhaps the biggest sin committed by local news organization’s web site, is the appearance of several columns of information, each containing a different category of content or sometimes advertisements. 1-column design is too few, while 7-column is sensory overload. I would argue 5- and 6-column design on a local news site is just as overloading. Too much information when you pull up the screen lessens the chance that you’ll be lured into more than one or two things you were looking for. If anything it’s confusing to the person viewing that much information. They’re more likely to act like one-stop shop customers than patron followers of your online publication. Sure that site probably has a following, a group of people that checks the site every single day, but those people are relying on memory from repeated visits — that may be OK for artistic style preference, but you are not going to gain new readers if you don’t start making it easier on them to show up unannounced and get comfortable. A 2-column layout is perfect for the actual article content page. Three-columns is probably the standard among the majority of sites producing a steady flow of constantly updated information. And 4-column is risky but, if formulated with lost of thought, can look full without overwhelming, as is the case with the Times Online. Personally I prefer 2-column sites.
Too many colors: Another sin is trying to include as much of the rainbow in your site’s basic design framework as possible. Anything with a dark background is going to take away from the main content, which is why people navigate to the news site in the first place. If they can’t find this immediately — with in the first glance — then you’ve probably just lost a few page views to some of your main content. I would say the use of grays, whites and blacks are all base colors but I wouldn’t chose more than two to distinguish who you are as a publication. I love how techradar.com uses its color pallet.
No differentiation between advertisements and content: The other problem with adding too much color is that your ads, which are usually more flashy and intensive, either won’t be recognized or will blend in with the jungle of other colors, thus becoming less effective and making you less money. Aside from the principles stated above, one subtle tactic is being employed as a way to both monetize the the advert effectively and keep it distinct from your main content. A rounded corner design is significant because it makes a separate identity for the site and allows advertisers the freedom to shape their message however they’d like.
Vertical presentation: Regardless of whether you chose a 1- 2- 3- or -4 column design for your site. The designed information should scroll vertically down the page and never side by side. It shouldn’t stop partially down the way of the page and then begin again with something completely different. I find it maddening that people do not make a “blog” front page design where all the posts descent by date posted one after another. This is the MOST effective way to get people to read a story because it only gives them one element to concentrate on viewing, if they don’t like that element. they can scroll downwards without feeling like they’re leaving anything behind. An additional advantage to designing your site in this way, as does all of the Gawker Media affiliated web sites, is that it translates very well to reading via mobile phone device or something similar.
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Design, Journalism | Tagged: Fail, Gawker Media, list, Local News, Marcus Snyder, TechRadar, Web design |
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Posted by Tom Cheredar
December 11, 2008
This post is written by graphic designer Marcus Snyder of Stray Pixel Studios:

Dearest WZTV.com,
Your local news has always had that magical way of capturing my attention. How could I say no to you when you have that irresistible sparkle in your top stories, and the way your features tug at my heart strings… it’s like the first time I held a puppy.
But, I would only be fooling myself if I said that your love affair with poor design wasn’t driving a wedge between us. Whenever I lay eyes on you, I have no idea where to start. My first glance lands on the television schedule. That’s not what I’m looking for. I’ll look again. This time it lands on a map. No, that’s not quite it either. Let me try one more time, I’ll gently scroll down three pages. Alabama news? No — still not it. Why, oh why local news, are you playing so hard to get? These games are breaking my heart.
I can’t help but feel like you’re hiding who you really are behind a barrier of tables and advertisements. I’m convinced that casinos have fewer distractions.
And the fact that you tease me with your lead story tears me apart on the inside. You have a video that you’ll play for anybody who asks, but you don’t have a link to a text version that I could access without having a high-speed internet connection. I wish you were more accommodating to my needs and give me the same care and attention that I give to you.
X’s and O’s,
Marcus
1 Comment |
Design | Tagged: Design, Fail, Marcus Snyder, News, Stray Pixel Studios, WZTV |
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Posted by Tom Cheredar