Reviews and Articles About the Book
- The Rough Notes Magazine (May 2001): Designing
Successful Web Sites: Put usability first; practice simplicity:
"Scores of books purport to offer insight into successful Web site
design. At least one actually does. ... It is recommended reading for
agency principals and Web managers alike."
- Free Pint
Bookshelf (March 2001): "It is a testament to the usefulness
of this book that it has lived beside my terminal at work for the last
few weeks as I put the theory into practice."
- NewMedia (September 2000): Who Says
Design Should be Simple?: "No one with whom I've spoken about
Designing Web Usability has come away unaffected" [...]
"the most important book of the year"
- Professional WebMaster Magazine (July/August 2000):
"explains lots of factors that taken individually fall into the
'obvious' category and when juxtaposed in an intelligent fashion lead to
a far deeper understanding of the subject than you would have been able
to arrive at on your own"
- Digital
Libraries Magazine (June 2000): "When I visit a hard-to-use
site, it often seems clear that Nielsen's advice would have made the
site easier to use. It's not that the web is inherently hard to use or
that I can't figure out a particular site; the site's designers are to
blame."
- Slashdot
(April 27, 2000): "well researched, sensible, and right on target [...]
impressively concise and comprehensive"
- Sydney Morning Herald, Australia, Science
rules in Web design (April 3, 2000): "relentlessly sensible"
- Internet World UK (March 2000): "if the Web design
company you are employing hasn't got a copy of this book on its shelves,
you'll know to go somewhere else"
- Danny Yee's
Book Reviews (March 31, 2000): "the most important book on web
publishing yet to appear"
- Ex Libris: E-Zine for Librarians
and Other Information Junkies (March 10, 2000): "I can't think of a
more valuable resource for both amateur and experienced webmasters"
- Chicago Tribune reading
list about current technology (March 6, 2000): "Jakob Nielsen knows
more about what makes Web sites work than anyone else on the planet"
- Business Week: Jakob
Nielsen's Gospel of Good Web Design (March 2, 2000): "should [...]
be read by any executive with responsibility for managing online
operations"
- The Irish Times: Click
here if you can be bothered, February 2000
- USA Today: A simple
vision of the Web, February 2000
- Review in Content
Spotlight, February 2000
- WebReference Newsletter, December 1999: We interview the
Web's usability czar about his new book and the Web's future
- Editor & Publisher: Keep
It Simple In the Age of Overload, December 1999
- Author
interview on Amazon.com, January 2000
- Epinions
category for reviews of the book
- Comments on
the book by people who read an advance copy of the manuscript
Table of Contents432 pages, full color.
Preface
1. Introduction: Why Web Usability?
- Art Versus Engineering
- A Call for Action
- What This Book Is Not
- Bad Usability Equals No Customers
- Why Everybody Designs Websites Incorrectly
2. Page Design
- Screen Real Estate
- Cross-Platform Design
- Where Are Users Coming From?
- The Car as a Web Browser
- Color Depth Getting Deeper
- Get a Big Screen
- Resolution-Independent Design
- Using Non-Standard Content
- Installation Inertia
- Helpful Super-Users
- When Is It Safe to Upgrade?
- Collect Browsers
- Separating Meaning and Presentation
- Platform Transition
- Data Lives Forever
- Response Times
- Predictable Response Times
- Server Response Time
- The Best Sites Are Fast
- Speedy Downloads, Speedy Connections
- Users Like Fast Pages
- You Need Your Own T1 Line
- Understanding Page Size
- Faster URLs
- Glimpsing the First Screenful
- Taking Advantage of HTTP Keep-Alive
- Linking
- Link Descriptions
- Link Titles
- Guidelines for Link Titles
- Use Link Titles Without Waiting
- Coloring Your Links
- The Physiology of Blue
- Link Expectations
- Peoplelinks
- Outbound Links
- Incoming Links
- Linking to Subscriptions and Registrations
- Advertising Links
- Style Sheets
- Standardizing Design Through Style Sheets
- WYSIWYG
- Style Sheet Examples for Intranets
- Making Sure Style Sheets Work
- Frames
- <NOFRAMES>
- Frames in Netscape 2.0
- Is It Ever OK to Use Frames?
- Borderless Frames
- Frames as Copyright Violation
- Credibility
- Printing
- Conclusion
3. Content Design
- Writing for the Web
- The Value of an Editor
- Keep Your Texts Short
- Copy Editing
- Web Attitude
- Scannability
- Why Users Scan
- Plain Language
- Page Chunking
- Limit Use of Within-Page Links
- Page Titles
- Writing Headlines
- Legibility
- Online Documentation
- Multimedia
- Waiting for Software to Evolve
- Auto-Installing Plug-Ins
- Response Time
- Images and Photographs
- Animation
- Showing Continuity in Transitions
- Indicating Dimensionality in Transitions
- Illustrating Change Over Time
- Multiplexing the Display
- Enriching Graphical Representations
- Visualizing Three-Dimensional Structures
- Attracting Attention
- Animation Backfires
- Video
- Streaming Video Versus Downloadable Video
- Audio
- Enabling Users with Disabilities to Use Multimedia Content
- Three-Dimensional Graphics
- Bad Use of 3D
- When to Use 3D
- Conclusion
4. Site Design
- The Home Page
- How Wide Should the Page Be?
- Splash Screens Must Die
- The Home Page Versus Interior Pages
- Deep Linking
- Affiliates Programs
- Metaphor
- Shopping Carts as Interface Standard
- Alternative Terminology
- Navigation
- Navigation Support in Browsers
- Where Am I?
- Where Have I Been?
- Where Can I Go?
- Site Structure
- The Vice-Presidential Button
- Importance of User-Centered Structure
- Breadth Versus Depth
- The User Controls Navigation
- Design Creationism Versus Design Darwinism
- Help Users Manage Large Amounts of Information
- Future Navigation
- Reducing Navigational Clutter
- Avoid 3D for Navigation
- Subsites
- Search Capabilities
- Don't Search the Web
- Micro-Navigation
- Global Search
- Advanced Search
- The Search Results Page
- Page Descriptions and Keywords
- Use a Wide Search Box
- See What People Search For
- Search Destination Design
- Integrating Sites and Search Engines
- URL Design
- Compound Domain Names
- Fully Specify URLs in HTML Code
- URL Guessing
- Beware of the Os and 0s
- Archival URLs
- Y2K URL
- Advertising a URL
- Supporting Old URLs
- User-Contributed Content
- Applet Navigation
- Double-Click
- Slow Operations
- Conclusion
5. Intranet Design
- Differentiating Intranet Design from Internet Design
- Extranet Design
- Improving the Bottom Line Through Employee Productivity
- Average Versus Marginal Costs
- Intranet Portals:
- The Corporate Information Infrastructure
- Get Rid of Email
- Intranet Maintenance
- The Big Three Infrastructure Components: Directory, Search, and
News
- Intranet Design Standards
- Guidelines for Standards
- Outsourcing Your Intranet Design
- Managing Employees' Web Access
- Hardware Standards
- Browser Defaults
- Search Engine Defaults
- Intranet User Testing
- Field Studies
- Don't Videotape in the Field
- Conclusion
6. Accessibility for Users with Disabilities
- Web Accessibility Initiative
- Disabilities Associated with Aging
- Assistive Technology
- Visual Disabilities
- Auditory Disabilities
- Speech Disabilities
- Motor Disabilities
- Cognitive Disabilities
- Conclusion: Pragmatic Accessibility
7. International Use: Serving a Global Audience
- Internationalization Versus Localization
- Designing for Internationalization
- International Inspection
- Should Domains End in .com?
- Translated and Multilingual Sites
- Language Choice
- Make Translations Bookmarkable
- Multilingual Search
- Regional Differences
- International User Testing
- Overcoming the Language Gap
- How Many Countries Should You Test?
- Thanking Your Participants
- Methods of Testing
- Travel Yourself
- Add a Few Days to Your Stay
- Remote User Testing
- Usability Labs for International Testing
- Self-Administered Tests
- Conclusion
8. Future Predictions: The Only Web Constant Is Change
- The Internet Is Hard
- Long-Term Trends
- The Anti-Mac User Interface
- Information Appliances
- Drawing a Computer
- The Invisible Computer
- WebTV
- Designing for WebTV
- Death of Web Browsers
- Slowly Increasing Bandwidth
- Metaphors for the Web
- Different Media, Different Strengths
- The Telephone
- Telephone Usability Problems
- Contact Tokens
- The Television
- Restructuring Media Space: Good-Bye, Newspapers
- Media Distinctions Caused by Technology
- Conclusion
9. Conclusion: Simplicity in Web Design
Recommended Readings
History of the Book TitleFor a long time, the working title for
this book was Designing Excellent Websites: Secrets of an
Information Architect, but we finally decided that this title was
too convoluted (as well as illogical: once you print 250,000 copies of
something, it's not exactly a "secret"). For the final title, simplicity
rules as that is the core message of the book. |
Read What the World is Reading:
English
ISBN 1-56205-810-X
Japanese ISBN
4-8443-5562-7
German
Erfolg des Einfachen ISBN 3-8272-5779-4
French
Conception de sites Web: L'art de la simplicité
ISBN 2-7440-0887-7 Review in
Journal du Net
Portuguese
(Brazil) Projetando Websites
Italian
Web Usability ISBN 88-7303-686-4
Finnish
WWW-Suunnittelu - Käytettävyys ISBN 951-826-203-9
Spanish
Usabilidad: Diseño de sitios Web ISBN 84-205-3008-5
Russian
ISBN 5-93286-004-9
Chinese ISBN 7-115-08726-1
Dutch
Functioneel webdesign: De kracht van eenvoud ISBN
90-430-0383-2
Note: Editions are shown in the order in which cover scans were
received. If you have a translation not shown here, please email a scan of
the cover (preferably 200 pixels wide) to info@nngroup.com
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