Dont Make Me Think Revisited A Common Sense Approach To Web Usability 3rd Edition Voices That
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Preface About this edition viIntroduction Read me first 2Throat clearing and disclaimersGuiding PrinciplesChapter 1 Don't make me think! 10Krug's First Law of UsabilityChapter 2 How we really use the Web 20Scanning, satisficing, and muddling throughChapter 3 Billboard Design 101 28Designing for scanning, not readingChapter 4 Animal, Vegetable, or Mineral? 42Why users like mindless choicesChapter 5 Omit needless words 48The art of not writing for the WebThings You Need to Get RightChapter 6 Street signs and Breadcrumbs 54Designing navigationChapter 7 The Big Bang Theory of Web Design 84The importance of getting people off on the right footMaking Sure You Got Them RightChapter 8 "The Farmer and the Cowman Should Be Friends" 102Why most arguments about usability are a waste of time, and how to avoid themChapter 9 Usability testing on 10 cents a day 110Keeping testing simple-so you do enough of itLarger Concerns and Outside InfluencesChapter 10 Mobile: It's not just a city in Alabama anymore 142Welcome to the 21st Century.You may experience a slight sense of vertigoChapter 11 Usability as common courtesy 164Why your Web site should be a menschChapter 12 Accessibility and you 172Just when you think you're done, a cat floats by with buttered toast strapped to its backChapter 13 Guide for the perplexed 182Making usability happen where you liveAcknowledgments 192Index 196Show Moreif(typeof performance.mark !== 'undefined' && typeof performance.measure !== 'undefined'){performance.mark("Product_Tabs_loading_end");performance.measure("productTabsDur","Product_Tabs_loading_start","Product_Tabs_loading_end");}Related Subjects User Interfaces Web pages->Design Web Site Design Web sites->Design->Handbooks, manuals, etc Web usability and user interfaces User Interfaces Web pages->Design Web Site Design Web sites->Design->Handbooks, manuals, etc Web usability and user interfacesCustomer Reviews$(function() {var isLoggedIn = false;var ratingsParams = {categoryID: 'Products',streamID: '1116173905', /* use Product ID for unique identifier? SkuID? - prd9780321965516 - ProductID? */containerID: 'ratingsDisplay',width: '100%',showCommentButton: false,ratingTemplate: '',onReadReviewsClicked: gotoReviews,onLoad: function() {var $reviewLink = $('.gig-rating-readReviewsLink','#ratingsDisplay'),// numRating = $(".gig-average-review").html();//SRL-2749numRating = $('.gig-rating-stars').attr('title') || $(".gig-average-review").html() || 0;var skutype = 'book',$headerReviewLink = $('.sticky-left .gig-rating-readReviewsLink'),reviewCountTxt = $reviewLink.html();if($reviewLink.html() === "0 Reviews") {$reviewLink.html("Be the first to write a review");}else if(skutype == 'book' || skutype == 'eBook'){if($reviewLink.html() === "1 Review"){reviewCountTxt = reviewCountTxt.replace("Review", "Customer Review");}else{reviewCountTxt = reviewCountTxt.replace("Reviews", "Customer Reviews");}$headerReviewLink.html(reviewCountTxt);}var widthOfAuthor= calculateWidthOfauthor();var widthOfReadReviewsLink= parseInt($('.header-gigiya-wrapper .gig-rating-readReviewsLink').width());if($('.read-review-header').length){$('.read-review-header').removeClass('hidden');$('.header-gigiya-wrapper .header-gigiya-inner').width(250 + widthOfAuthor + widthOfReadReviewsLink );}if($('#EditorialReviews').length){$('.editorial-review-header').removeClass('hidden');$('.header-gigiya-wrapper .header-gigiya-inner').width(250 + widthOfAuthor + widthOfReadReviewsLink );}$("#avgRating").html("Average Rating: " + numRating);//SRL-2749 : Star rating information is not clearvar ariaText = numRating + " rating out of 5 Stars";$(".gig-rating-stars").attr('aria-label',ariaText);initBuyOptnsPDP();}},ratingsParamsComments = {categoryID: 'Products',streamID: '1116173905',containerID: 'prodReviewInfo',ratingTemplate:'' +'
Hundreds of thousands of Web designers and developers have relied on usability guru Steve Krug's guide to understand the principles of intuitive navigation and information design. Witty, commonsensical, and eminently practical, it's one of the best loved and most recommended books on the subject. It's a core foundational book that every Web designer must internalize to make their designs truly effective. In this substantially revised edition, Steve returns with fresh perspective to reconsider the principles he originally laid out--commenting, amending, amplifying, and offering fresh new examples to underscore their importance. This edition adds an important new chapter on mobile as well as integrating coverage of mobile throughout.
I have noticed that some people seem to think that a common type of nonsense bot is a legitimate user, and I want to ask why? The bot has repeatedly targeted the site, this being at least the fourth time it has appeared since I started watching the RC sometime in May. It is not limited to one IP, and repeats the same nonsense over a few days. The exact phrase is "Hello. And Bye." and it has been exactly the same since I first saw it. Google the phrase, or the IPs, and you will notice one thing come up again and again, spam. Please don't presume innocence here, as it is quite clearly a nonsense bot, posting nonsense that can be traced back to (at least) 2006. If anyone with rights feels up to it, could they create an abuse filter for this. If you still feel unsure, just set the filter to tag it, and it will soon fill up, so you can see how common it is. Silence is GoldenBreak the Silence 14:21, 27 October 2012 (GMT) 2b1af7f3a8