Descripción del título

Thoroughly rewritten for today's web environment, this bestselling book offers a fresh look at a fundamental topic of web site development: navigation design. Amid all the changes to the Web in the past decade, and all the hype about Web 2.0 and various ""rich"" interactive technologies, the basic problems of creating a good web navigation system remain. Designing Web Navigation demonstrates that good navigation is not about technology-it's about the ways people find information, and how you guide them. Ideal for beginning to intermediate web designers, managers, other non-des
Monografía
monografia Rebiun19511894 https://catalogo.rebiun.org/rebiun/record/Rebiun19511894 m o d | cr -n--------- 070220s2007 caua ob 001 0 eng d 1-306-81571-1 0-596-51606-1 0-596-55378-1 UPVA 996884303203706 UAM 991007687157604211 UPM 991005521337404212 CBUC 991009627015506719 CBUC 991000730694706712 UCAR 991007810523904213 MiAaPQ eng rda pn MiAaPQ MiAaPQ eng 006.76 Kalbach, James Designing Web navigation James Kalbach 1st ed Sebastopol, California O'Reilly 2007 Sebastopol, California Sebastopol, California O'Reilly 1 online resource (416 p.) 1 online resource (416 p.) Text txt computer c online resource cr Description based upon print version of record Includes bibliographical references (pages 377-384) and index Designing Web Navigation; AUDIENCE FOR THIS BOOK; ORGANIZATION OF THIS BOOK; INTERNATIONALIZATION; ACKNOWLEDGMENTS; HOW TO CONTACT US; SAFARI® ENABLED; ABOUT THE AUTHOR; ABOUT THE TECHNICAL REVIEWERS; I. Foundations of Web Navigation; 1.2. THE NEED FOR NAVIGATION; 1.2.2. NAVIGATION SHOWS LOCATION; 1.2.3. NAVIGATION SHOWS ""ABOUTNESS"" OF A SITE; 1.2.4. NAVIGATION REFLECTS BRAND; 1.2.5. NAVIGATION AFFECTS SITE CREDIBILITY; 1.2.6. THE BOTTOM LINE; 1.3. WEB NAVIGATION DESIGN; 1.4. SUMMARY; 1.5. QUESTIONS; 1.6. FURTHER READING; 2. Understanding Navigation; 2.2. SEEKING INFORMATION ONLINE 2.3. WEB BROWSING BEHAVIOR2.3.2. NAVIGATIONAL CHOICES; 2.3.2.2. BANNER BLINDNESS; 2.3.2.3. SATISFICING; 2.4. INFORMATION SHAPE; 2.4.2. DESIGNING FOR INFORMATION SHAPE; 2.5. EXPERIENCING INFORMATION; 2.5.2. EMOTIONS IN INFORMATION SEEKING; 2.5.2.2. TAILORING THE ISP; 2.5.3. INFORMATION EXPERIENCE; 2.6. SUMMARY; 2.7. QUESTIONS; 2.8. FURTHER READING; 3. Mechanisms of Navigation; 3.2. PAGING NAVIGATION; 3.2.2. DIRECT ACCESS PAGING; 3.3. BREADCRUMB TRAIL; 3.3.1.2. PATH BREADCRUMB TRAILS; 3.3.1.3. ATTRIBUTE BREADCRUMB TRAILS; 3.4. TREE NAVIGATION; 3.5. SITE MAPS; 3.6. DIRECTORIES; 3.7. TAG CLOUDS 3.8. A-Z INDEXES3.9. NAVIGATION BARS AND TABS; 3.10. VERTICAL MENU; 3.11. DYNAMIC MENUS; 3.12. DROP-DOWN MENUS; 3.13. VISUALIZING NAVIGATION; 3.13.2. VISUAL THESAURI; 3.13.3. VISUAL CLUSTERS; 3.14. BROWSER MECHANISMS; 3.15. SUMMARY; 3.16. QUESTIONS; 3.17. FURTHER READING; 4. Types of Navigation; 4.1.1.2. LOCAL NAVIGATION; 4.1.2. ASSOCIATIVE NAVIGATION; 4.1.2.2. ADAPTIVE NAVIGATION; 4.1.2.3. QUICK LINKS; 4.1.2.4. FOOTER NAVIGATION; 4.1.3. UTILITY NAVIGATION; 4.1.3.2. TOOLBOXES; 4.1.3.3. LINKED LOGO; 4.1.3.4. LANGUAGE SELECTORS; 4.1.3.5. COUNTRY OR REGION SELECTORS 4.1.4. INTERNAL PAGE NAVIGATION4.2. PAGE TYPES; 4.2.1.2. LANDING PAGES; 4.2.1.3. GALLERY PAGES; 4.2.1.4. SEARCH RESULT PAGES; 4.2.2. CONTENT PAGES; 4.2.3. FUNCTIONAL PAGES; 4.2.3.2. SUBMISSION FORMS; 4.2.3.3. WEB APPLICATIONS; 4.2.4. PAGE LENGTH; 4.3. SUMMARY; 4.4. QUESTIONS; 4.5. FURTHER READING; 5. Labeling Navigation; 5.2. ASPECTS OF GOOD LABELS; 5.2.1.2. AVOID TECHNICAL TERMINOLOGY; 5.2.1.3. AVOID CLEVER LABELS; 5.2.1.4. AVOID ABBREVIATIONS; 5.2.1.5. USE APPROPRIATE TONE OF VOICE; 5.2.2. DESCRIPTIVE LABELS; 5.2.3. MUTUALLY EXCLUSIVE LABELS; 5.2.4. FOCUSED LABELS; 5.2.5. CONSISTENT LABELS 5.2.6. LABEL LENGTH5.3. LABELING SYSTEMS; 5.3.2. URLS; 5.3.3. PAGE TITLES; 5.3.4. CREATING A FLEXIBLE SCHEME; 5.3.4.2. ADDRESSING REDUNDANCY; 5.4. PERSUASIVE LABELS; 5.5. TRANSLATING LABELS; 5.6. SOURCES OF LABELS; 5.7. SUMMARY; 5.8. QUESTIONS; 5.9. FURTHER READING; II. A Framework for Navigation Design; 6.1.2. EASE OF LEARNING; 6.1.3. CONSISTENCY AND INCONSISTENCY; 6.1.4. FEEDBACK; 6.1.5. EFFICIENCY; 6.1.6. CLEAR LABELS; 6.1.7. VISUAL CLARITY; 6.1.8. APPROPRIATENESS FOR TYPE OF SITE; 6.1.9. ALIGNING WITH USER NEEDS; 6.2. EVALUATION METHODS; 6.2.2. CHECKLIST REVIEW 6.2.3. NAVIGATION STRESS TEST Thoroughly rewritten for today's web environment, this bestselling book offers a fresh look at a fundamental topic of web site development: navigation design. Amid all the changes to the Web in the past decade, and all the hype about Web 2.0 and various ""rich"" interactive technologies, the basic problems of creating a good web navigation system remain. Designing Web Navigation demonstrates that good navigation is not about technology-it's about the ways people find information, and how you guide them. Ideal for beginning to intermediate web designers, managers, other non-des English Internet searching User interfaces (Computer systems) Web site development Web sites- Design Web-based user interfaces World Wide Web Electronic books 0-596-52810-8