Comments and suggestions

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(Wiki-Problems)
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==Wiki-Problems==
 
==Wiki-Problems==
*'''no breadcrumb links''' - I am missing breadcrumb links/trails on each page. Every single time I am editing a page and afterwards want go back to the page I am coming from (one hierarchy level up), I have either to click a couple of times on the "back"-button of my browser or go back to the mainpage and go from there to the desired page again. So in my opinion every single page, since they are organized in a hierarchy, should have at the top of the page links to each level above it.
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*'''no breadcrumb links''' - I am missing breadcrumb links/trails on each page. Every single time I am editing a page and afterwards want go back to the page I am coming from (one hierarchy level up), I have either to click a couple of times on the "back"-button of my browser or go back to the mainpage and go from there to the desired page again. So in my opinion every single page, since they are organized in a hierarchy, should have at the top of the page links to each level above it. So http://www.smartisans.com/articles/web_navigation.aspx breadcrumb links] simplify navigation in the wiki.
  
 
<blockquote>
 
<blockquote>
 
''Visual Confirmation<br>
 
''Visual Confirmation<br>
The fifth principle involved with creating an effective web based User-Centered Design accomplishes visual confirmation of the user’s location within a site (Lynch and Horton 2002). Whether it is through links, titles and headings or a '''breadcrumb trail''', the user should always have visual feedback from the site as to their position within the site. This gives the user a frame from which to work from. Knowing a relative or concrete position within a site lets the user feel comfortable and open to the message of the site, it also lends ethos to the site''. [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Techniques_for_creating_a_User_Centered_Design wikipedia on UCD]
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The fifth principle involved with creating an effective web based User-Centered Design accomplishes visual confirmation of the user’s location within a site (Lynch and Horton 2002). Whether it is through links, titles and headings or a '''breadcrumb trail''', the user should always have visual feedback from the site as to their position within the site. This gives the user a frame from which to work from. Knowing a relative or concrete position within a site lets the user feel comfortable and open to the message of the site, it also lends ethos to the site''. [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Techniques_for_creating_a_User_Centered_Design wikipedia]
 
</blockquote>
 
</blockquote>

Revision as of 22:15, 29 September 2008

What can we do to make the course (or wiki) better?

PARTICIPATE!!!

Wiki-Problems

  • no breadcrumb links - I am missing breadcrumb links/trails on each page. Every single time I am editing a page and afterwards want go back to the page I am coming from (one hierarchy level up), I have either to click a couple of times on the "back"-button of my browser or go back to the mainpage and go from there to the desired page again. So in my opinion every single page, since they are organized in a hierarchy, should have at the top of the page links to each level above it. So http://www.smartisans.com/articles/web_navigation.aspx breadcrumb links] simplify navigation in the wiki.
Visual Confirmation
The fifth principle involved with creating an effective web based User-Centered Design accomplishes visual confirmation of the user’s location within a site (Lynch and Horton 2002). Whether it is through links, titles and headings or a breadcrumb trail, the user should always have visual feedback from the site as to their position within the site. This gives the user a frame from which to work from. Knowing a relative or concrete position within a site lets the user feel comfortable and open to the message of the site, it also lends ethos to the site. wikipedia
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