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Simplicity Rules

Adam DuVander on keeping it simple

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Spot the fake

December 9, 2007 by Adam DuVander

You know how you run into useless parked domain sites as you’re clicking around the web? They have keyword links on the left side, a text header with the domain name, and absolutely no useful content. These sites all look alike, kind of like this:

Which is the fake, parked domain?

But only one of those is a parked domain. The other is an actual site. Can you guess which is which?

The real site is Metro Mark Corp (the one of the left), the same company that was paying for Google Ads to nowhere two years ago.

Now, I’m no designer, but think a very basic requirement of any site is to not look like spam.

InfoVis (and calculators) for the masses

December 7, 2007 by Adam DuVander

With today’s announcement of the Google Charts API, anybody who can figure out how to use it can easily add charts to their site. The same way embedded maps became ubiquitous, now every site can apply basic information visualization.

Again, The Goog has chosen an expensive market and made it free. And again, they’ve made it just hard enough that it takes some work to use it.

Charting Software Revenues

When they released the Google Maps API, it had no way to convert addresses to latitude/longitude coordinates. With Charts, they make the publisher do the work of converting numbers to the right scale and granularity.

You can pass Google Charts numbers, but they probably can’t be your raw numbers. It’s basic math to convert your data into a scale for a chart, but computers are really good at basic math. I wish they did it for me.

In Google’s guidelines for granularity, they explain themselves a bit. They don’t want us sending queries for a graph thousands of data points long when it will only be shown in, say, 250 pixels.

Fair enough, but as it stands, it needs to be easier. For me to use their charts on the fly, I need to be able to pass my raw numbers in the URL. I can do that with this sparklines generator.

I’m sure we’ll be seeing all sorts of create-a-chart tools going up in the next few weeks. That will make it easier to add these simple charts to any web page.

Until then, break out your calculators. You have some basic math to do.

Way to be optional, SlideShare

December 6, 2007 by Adam DuVander

If you’ve been to a conference recently, chances are you’ve heard a speaker say, “I’ll put these on SlideShare.” The website makes it easy to post and view slides by providing a Flash player, eliminating the trouble of large files and presentation software compatibility.

Already it’s simple, but they make things even easier by making registration optional. You can upload slides and share them without creating an account. Then, if you change your mind, when you register the presentations will become part of your account.

SlideShare upload -- registration optional

SlideShare is an excellent example of something I asked for over two years ago. I suggested we should make 2006 the Year of the Optional Registration. It’s a shame SlideShare is a rarity. Maybe 2008?

There are so many reasons why people want to require registration, with it mostly coming down to control. Making an account is something I do after I have sampled what you have to offer. The more of a sample you give me, the better.

It’s another version of the freemium model. Before you pay with your time to register, you should have the opportunity to test things out.

Way to go, SlideShare. Way to be optional!

One key to rule them all

December 6, 2007 by Adam DuVander

We recently bought our first house. One of the best things about it is the freedom to change something we don’t like.

This week, a locksmith came out to the house and changed the locks. Though we have a small place, there were three separate keys, one for each door. That was annoying, but it turns out to be very easy (and inexpensive) to have that changed.

We were able to keep our same lock housings, while replacing the mechanism so that each lock shared the same key.

Simple keyring

Now my keyring is very simple, just three keys. It’s lovely. Last week I had five keys (three for home, two for the office) where I now have one.

I don’t know how easy it was for the locksmith, but it’s incredibly simple for me.

Show me the number

November 27, 2007 by Adam DuVander

I’ve noticed a few books and magazines lately doing something truly useful with their cover and jacket blurbs. They tell you which page to turn to.

Back jacket of Made to Stick

Made to Stick lists some topics, then invites you to open the book to a page where you’ll find an example of the topic. Where I might read the jacket of most books and then put them down, this one dares me to investigate. It gives me a path of least resistance.

This Kiplinger’s cover does the same thing. Rather than just plaster the front with headlines, which requires searching for the table of contents, they give you the page number.

Kiplinger cover shows page numbers

It’s such an obvious method, I’m not sure why other publishers don’t do it. When I see an article that interests me and I know I can turn directly to it, I am engaging with the book or magazine. Who wouldn’t want that? An engaged reader is more likely to buy and is a better sell for the ads (in the case of a magazine).

Why make them remain lost? Why not point them in a few directions and take a chance at engaging them? And all you have to do it put a little number next to a blurb or headline you’re already writing.

To convert this lesson to something usable on the web, see The Page Paradigm.

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Simplicity Series

  • Designing the Obvious
  • Paradox of Choice
  • Laws of Simplicity

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