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Creating Killer Interactive Web Sites: The Art of Integrating Interactivity and Design
 
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Creating Killer Interactive Web Sites: The Art of Integrating Interactivity and Design [Paperback]

Ardith Ibanez (Author), Bernie Dechant (Author), Andrew Sather (Editor)
3.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (18 customer reviews)


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Book Description

June 1997
Creating Killer Interactive Web Sites takes an original look into the never-before-revealed secrets and strategies of one of the world's most preeminent Web design firms. Using a highly visual, inspiring approach, you'll discover the art of integrating interactivity into a well-designed site, as well as explore the emerging tools and trends needed to craft a successful Web presence. With full-color examples, real-world case studies, and proven techniques, you'll uncover the intricacies of designing a truly interactive Web experience that will bring visitors back to your site again and again. In addition, you'll discover how to effectively use JavaScript, Java, Shockwave, Flash, cookies, Web graphics, animations, style sheets, and multimedia in your site. With this book, you'll have all the tools and expert advice you need to bring your site to a higher level of professionalism and effectiveness.

Editorial Reviews

From the Publisher

Creating Killer Interactive Sites: Web Design by Adjacency is a one-of-a kind look into the secrets of one of the world's most preeminent Web design firms: Adjacency. Providing the most in-depth analysis of Web design ever published, this guide brings a new standard to the integration of design and interactivity in creating successful sites. - Explains the art of integrating interactivity into a well-designed Web site

- Offers proven techniques to entice site visitors

- Gives detailed case studies of sites that successfully integrate design and interactivity

From the Author

Not to be confused with Creating Killer Web Sites. For the record... As the author of Creating Killer Web Sites, I've been asked if I had anything to do with this book. I did not. I am sorry for the confusion with the titles -- it's our publishers' decision. Titles are not protected by copyright -- I encourage people to make book-buying decisions based on content, not titles.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 211 pages
  • Publisher: Hayden Books (June 1997)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1568303734
  • ISBN-13: 978-1568303734
  • Product Dimensions: 10 x 8 x 0.5 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.4 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 3.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (18 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #3,286,099 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

18 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
3.3 out of 5 stars (18 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

13 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Where is the rest?, February 8, 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: Creating Killer Interactive Web Sites: The Art of Integrating Interactivity and Design (Paperback)
Well for a computer book on web design that touts this great web site to get examples and download scripts, it would be nice if the site was kept up. Not worth the money, and I for one would never recommend the book to anyone.
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18 of 21 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Didn't follow through with promise of companion website., August 18, 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: Creating Killer Interactive Web Sites: The Art of Integrating Interactivity and Design (Paperback)
This book constantly refers to scripts available at their companion website. At the website all you will find is an inadequate excuse for why the scripts aren't there. Without the scripts the book is nothing more than useless theory that can't be put into practice.

Save your money and buy a book that includes a companion CD-ROM rather than empty promises of a companion website.

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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Design that works, May 1, 1998
By A Customer
This review is from: Creating Killer Interactive Web Sites: The Art of Integrating Interactivity and Design (Paperback)
Web Design is more than good design. Good design is necessarybut not sufficient. It needs to be complemented by clever design. Thisis the point that gets driven home by the book from Adjacency. And funnily enough, its not just talk - all the concepts are tried and tested. It is refreshingly different to read a "how to" book that gets down from the pulpit of painful platitudes and makes a big deal about techniques and tricks that really work. Not to short circuit great design, but to augment it, for a medium that is bursting out of its technological seams for the last three years.

Conquering the trade off between high graphics and high download speeds, making pictures bleed off the page without scrolling, how to design for the 640-480 monitor as well as the 800-600 monitor (a personal favourite) - these are some of the magic tricks that the book shares. In addition, the attention paid to site management, updating, information design and branding, are eye-openers to web designers overly preoccupied with the interface design.

The profile of the authors is really where the book takes off. Pascal (love the name!), who can't figure out whether he's a designer or a programmer. And Andrew Sather, with training in graphic design, creative writing and art history, there's always enough in the book to suggest a level of thinking that requires the burst of brilliance made possible by the synergy of distinct disciplines. Proving once again that the web is really the Wild West for interdisciplinary cowboys.

Take the issue of branding. The book suggests the creation of a brand board - a practice not uncommon in real-life branding and communication exercises. The idea is to create a set of visuals, images, words and actually create a collage that is used by the design people. Further, there is also a clear need to develop a user profile (beyond saying NRI or all Indians). The user profile needs to get into psychographics, demographics and technographics. The last refers both to the kind of comp! uting infrastructure and access to the net, browser preferences, screen resolution and the like, as well as their attitude to technology, information and browsing habits.

A particularly interesting technique to handle mutiple browsers, for example, is to use large images with transparent GIFs and hypertext. The background image can be a JPEG, which will exactly fit a 600-800 screen. But the text and the foreground are all designed to fit the 640-480 screen. The bottom and right end of the image, therefore, are areas which are not always seen and serve primarily to present a complete picture. The compression can be increased in this area, so that the overall file size stays small. Clearly, there is no reason to succumb to the trade-off between rich images and download times. Instead there must always be a push to break the trade-off to achieve both. It is this thinking which, more than anything else is the signature of "Creating Killer Interactive Web Sites".

The authors don't stop at design, they highlight the need to stay in touch with the client after the launch. Quarterly reviews of competing sites and updates on technology are some of the things that you can do to promote the relationship and elevate it to a new plane. The site launch has not been ignored either. A site needs to be launched with some fanfare. A press conference, an event, a competition or an on line event are some of the things that you can do to promote the site at launch. The drama of unveiling the site has a certain power that makes the site larger than life.

This is another good idea that has actually been implemented. Using the web itself should be a natural corollary while talking about it. After all, as the final chapter in the book says, "A web Site Manager's work is never done. For a great web site to remain viable, it must grow and evolve visually, editorially, functionally and technologically. Your site must at a minimum, stay abreast of devel! opments in your business. Ideally, you will continually evaluate your site's effectiveness vis-à-vis your business objectives and its usefulnesxs from the point of view of the user."

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