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Archive for the 'for Authors' Category

Paged Media: web design for authors

Thursday, August 3rd, 2006

The web design for authors posts I’ve been doing have evolved into an actual business. Paged Media is a web design company devoted to authors.

You know me; the designs will be standards-compliant, CSS-based, accessible, and search engine friendly no matter what. We’re also using basic content management wherever we can. We know a good [...]

Authors discussing web design

Sunday, March 19th, 2006

Good discussion of what should go on an author’s site over at LiveJournal. Of course, yours truly had to weigh in, but other people had interesting things to say too.

My original comment exceeded LJ’s character limit. I’ll take that as the universe’s subtle hint that I should start posting here more often again, now [...]

Server log analysis

Thursday, June 23rd, 2005

I’m swamped with work, and in my free time I’ve been writing madly. And I’m getting back to that in just a second, but I wrote this up quickly as a reply to someone and then realized that it was too long and I really should just post it here instead.

I just went through, for [...]

Things that make you look like an amateur on the web, part 3: just plain stupid

Friday, May 27th, 2005

Misspellings. I know of at least one NYT bestseller whose name is misspelled in her page title. There’s no copyeditor between you and your web audience. And search engines won’t recognize you if there’s a typo in your name. Script kiddie language. (“R U sexxy?” Probably not.) Font abuse — a proliferation of colors and/or styles. Comic [...]

Things that make you look like an amateur on the web, part 2: special effects

Friday, May 27th, 2005

Mouse droppings. As annoying as pop-up ads — and the only way to get rid of them is to leave the site. Mystery meat navigation. Your visitors should never have to guess where to click. Transition effects. Java plugins or applets. These things are guaranteed to crash somebody’s browser, even if they work in yours. Javascript that disables basic [...]

Things that make you look like an amateur on the web, part 1: images

Friday, May 27th, 2005

(I realize lists of things you shouldn’t do are less helpful than tips on what you should do, but let’s get the basics out of the way first. I’ll get back to the proactive stuff in a bit.)

Backgrounds, borders, bars, and bullets taken from a free graphics site. You don’t need to go out and [...]

Jonathan Strahan on author’s sites

Tuesday, March 22nd, 2005

Seems I’m not the only one with something to say…

Provide information people expect. If you are an author and you are putting up a web page add a “News” section. In a fit of foolhardiness, actually call it “News”.

A website is a communications tool. Use it. Be clear, be concise and be obvious. Make sure [...]

Website Content: The Book List

Wednesday, February 23rd, 2005

Or, How Not to List Your Books in Such a Way as to Make Your Readers Rend Their Garments in Despair.

Another common question from the RWA talk: “What content should the site have?” Or, put another way, “What do readers want?”

I like this question. I’m going to talk about it at great length, but for [...]

Contests and freebie sluts

Friday, February 18th, 2005

A quickie while I get back up to speed: why contests are not effective promotional tools for authors.

What to look for in a professional web designer

Thursday, February 10th, 2005

Knowledge of web standards. A good, recent portfolio. Make sure that at least one site was done within the last calendar year. Someone you aren’t related to or close friends with.

Really, that’s about it. Web standards covers a lot — compliant sites tend to be accessible to the disabled (and Google counts as a blind visitor, by [...]

On hiring designers, FrontPage, and your 12-year-old nephew

Thursday, February 10th, 2005

[For those coming in from Ma.gnolia, it might be helpful to know, until I get my category tags fixed, that this is part of my web design for authors series.]

The choice between designing a site yourself or hiring someone to do it for you is a lot like the choice between negotiating your novel contract [...]

Why web standards matter

Thursday, February 10th, 2005

In my cost overview I nattered on about Dreamweaver’s standards compliance and Frontpage’s lack thereof. There are a number of reasons this is important, and The Dollars and Sense of Building to Standards summarizes them nicely.

Jeffrey Zeldman lays it on the line in 99.9% of Websites Are Obsolete. I’ll go out a little ways [...]

Belated intro

Wednesday, February 9th, 2005

What qualifies me to tell you anything about the web

Hosting and domains

Wednesday, February 9th, 2005

As I mentioned yesterday, you should pay no more than $10/month to host a typical, modestly successful site. Start with a basic package; you can always upgrade if you need more disk space than you anticipated or your site draws an unexpected amount of traffic.

Basic packages, because they are cheap, often come with a setup [...]

How much does a website cost?

Tuesday, February 8th, 2005

Last fall, my friend Sarah and I gave a talk on web design for her RWA chapter. We sent out a little survey ahead of time to find out what people wanted to know — and, implicitly, how much they knew about web design in general. (I didn’t think I was going to find much [...]

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Writing & Publishing 101

Paged Media: Web Design for Authors

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Talking Points Caribou Barbie — rape kit sold separately.

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Being the Book Lady — this made my day.

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A fanfic writer goes to Clarion. “...all the sandcastle skills you learned over in Sandbox Someone Else’s Canon are a lot harder to use when you’re not given sand to start with.” Great post.

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Tina Fey and Sarah Palin Side by Side on CNN. “That was the first time I’ve ever heard the parody on SNL actually use exactly what was said…”

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The Texas voter registration deadline is October 6. See if you’re registered. If not, find your county registrar to fix it.

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Have you created your 5 Second Test? — a nifty little test for web designers.

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Aaron Sorkin Conjures a Meeting of Obama and Bartlet — How much do I love Maureen Dowd right now? LOTS and LOTS.

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Download ‘Boojum,’ by Elizabeth Bear and Sarah Monette — in honor of Talk Like a Pirate Day.

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TwitterKeys — “TwitterKeys is a browser bookmarket that pulls up expressive characters for easy copy & paste of all those crazy unicode symbols that people love to include in their emails and blog posts.” Very handy. See also: ⌘C ⌘V Character.

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The great Before & After Magazine talks about designing business cards for arts and crafts sales, including tips on photographing the items.

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If you have not yet seen Firefly (infidel!), it’s now streaming for free on IMDB, via Hulu. The episodes are out of order, though, so you might want to refer to the Firefly wiki’s episode list rather than IMDB or TV.com, both of which list the massively incorrect original airing order.

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