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World Wide Web and Hypermedia

Explore the challenges of hypertext design, including content organization and user interface metaphors. Discover the functionality of web authoring tools for importing, editing, and exporting web content.

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World Wide Web and Hypermedia

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  1. World Wide Web and Hypermedia CIS 376 Bruce R. Maxim UM-Dearborn

  2. Recognizing Potential Hypertext Projects • A large body of information exists and is organized into several fragments • Fragments are interrelated • User only needs to access to small number of fragments at a time

  3. Hypertext Design Problems • Project content inappropriate for hypertext • Poor hypertext design (e.g. too many links, long chains, dull articles, inadequate overviews)

  4. Hypertext Authoring Tool Functionality • Import • Edit • Export • Print • Search

  5. Web Authoring Tools - part 1 • Full set of direct manipulation editing functions • Link list management tools • Link verification • Range of display formatting • Availability of search and replace • Control of color • Capability to switch between authoring and editing

  6. Web Authoring Tools - part 2 • Availability of graphics and video embedding or editing tools • Collaboration possible • Data compression • Security control • Encryption • Reliability • Import and export of standard interchange formats

  7. Hypertext Design - part 1 • Know users and their tasks • Ensure meaningful structure comes first • Multidisciplinary design team • Respect chunking • Show interrelationships within and between documents explicitly

  8. Hypertext Design - part 2 • Be consistent in creating document names • Work form master reference lists • Ensure simplicity in traversal • Design each screen carefully • Require low user cognitive load

  9. Introductory Article Styles • Advanced Organizers • Executive overview • Top down (Table of Contents) • Menu • Search engine

  10. Web Site Organizational Styles • Based originator's identity • Based on originator's goals interpreted by designer • sales • advertising • information • access • services • discussion or nurture community • Number of pages or amount of accessible information

  11. Web Site Knowledge Structures • Unstructured lists • Linear structures • Arrays or tables • Hierarchies or trees • Multi-trees or faceted retrieval • Networks

  12. Web Action Types • Formulation • Action • Results • Refinement

  13. Web Interface Metaphors • File cabinet • Books with chapters • Encyclopedia with articles • Television with channels • Shopping mall with stores • Museum with exhibits

  14. Web Page Handles and Widgets • Labels • Icons • Buttons • Image maps • Navigation handles on page borders

  15. Web Design Challenges - Content: • Understandable • Interesting and valuable • Capable of converting web surfers into site users • Consistent and engaging • Skilled integration of text, graphics, audio, video, and information • Easily navigated • Unified in look and feel

  16. Essential Web Design Criteria • Effectiveness • complete • organized presentation • Affectiveness • captures user attention • Navigational efficiency

  17. First Generation Web Sites • Content focused • Ignored flash • Very few links

  18. Second Generation Web Sites • Flashy features added for their own sake • Lots of hyperlinks

  19. Third Generation Web Sites • Balances the 3 design components • Demonstrated a deeper understanding of • intended audience • purpose of web presentation • design challenges • media opportunities • information presented

  20. Fourth Generation Web Sites • Increased interactivity • Providing live access to current content • Multimedia • Make use of smart links and knowledge engineering

  21. Mutual Understandings Between Designers and Users • Designer must execute a design that reflects user • knowledge, • capabilities • information needs • User must have an accurate perception of the • web site purpose • information being presented

  22. Attracting Users • Users form then initial impression of a web site within the first 7 seconds of access. • While at a web site, users continuously evaluate their progress toward accomplishing their goals.

  23. Web Site Purposes • Entertainment • Enable information exchange • Information • what • where • when • who • how • cost

  24. Web Creator Roles • Presenter (client) • Information steward • Designer

  25. Web Designer Skill Set • Understand information (semantics) • Translate information to structure • Translate structure to web pages • Have artistic sense • Have capacity for language selection and use • Be able to work with multimedia technology • Be able to work with client/server technology (database, web access, security)

  26. Research and Idea Generation • Define information for each group of expected users • Statement of what web presentation is to do • List of information resources

  27. Idea Generation Techniques • Brainstorming • Interviews • Virtual value chain analysis • business process analysis • value added benefits to customers • Web research

  28. Defining Information Domain • User-centered approach • identify each user group and determine their information needs • Information-centered approach • each type of information is classified and then clustered according to potential user group needs

  29. Important Analysis Questions • What do potential users want to know about the company? • What do users want to know about the people? • What do users want to know about company business? • How might users want to interact with our company?

  30. Information Decomposition and Information Structuring • Decomposition - process of separating information into component objects or chunks • Structuring - process of organizing the chunks into a knowledge architecture

  31. Chunk Tracking Every chunk needs to be tracked somehow • List or outline • Group of index cards • Database • CASE tools

  32. Information Structuring Guidelines • Chunks organized into a directed graph • Add cardinality information to each graph node • Add volatility information to each graph node • Consider redrawing the diagram as a summary diagram • Create object relationship matrix • Examine matrix for critical objects • Revise summary diagram as needed

  33. Object Relationship Types • General to specific • Isa • Associative

  34. Web Design Process • Establish content and location of each information object using text analysis and composition • Identify and implement hyperlink targets • Identify and implement multimedia options • Test and revise

  35. Text analysis • develop best prose statements to convey intended message for each information object • Text composition • all objects are organized, rearranged, and regrouped until best web site placement is found (relies on storyboarding techniques)

  36. Storyboarding • Once a complete set of web pages is storyboarded the storyboard are arranged in predicted thread order. • Each thread needs to be analyzed for gaps and sequencing problems. • Testing of final threads is done by walking through each thread using the appropriate user viewpoint.

  37. Web Page Composition • Layout • Typography • Color • Hyperlinks

  38. Hyperlink Types - part 1 • Intra-page • used assist access to long complex pages • Intranet • used to create threads for users • show business relationships • breakup long web pages

  39. Hyperlink Types - part 2 • Intersite • value added stuff when another site is • complete • accurate • compatible with your site • appeals to audience • supports page goals

  40. Linkage Evaluation • Done by building a linkage diagram and examining ratios of actual links to total possible for each page. • Ratio of actual links to total possible links should be 40-60%. • 7 plus or minus 2 is another good rule of thumb for links from given page.

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