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Comments Off … Radio Silence

May 8, 2019 by MlleD

Drawing from my daily project where I draw first thing in the morning before turning my phone off.

I just turned comments off on this blog. If you want to get in touch use the contact page, or visit us at goodybank

No doubt I should, and likely will, simply re-direct this site at some point, but for now there *is* some trickle of juice, a smidgen of value that keeps me hanging on.

Also I want to transfer over some of that g0ogle juice over to the new site, once I find make the time. I wrote about time once or twice.

There is a brutal efficiency in just lopping off comments that is quite satisfying and helps literally retrieve time, by no longer moderating spam.

I’m going to write an article about what to do with old sites, re-design, re-align (hey wait I already wrote that in 2014!) but it’s 2019 baby and times have changed. Several projects have shown their fragility (2 clients, 3 ours) and I’ve noticed many sites in general that really need re-vamping, so I think the time is ripe to write about what to do when faced with the perils of obsolescence (also written in 2014). But tearing that bandaid off is hard. I know. That’s why this site is still here. For now.

Soon Come. Soon Come.

Filed Under: Blogorama Tagged With: change, obsolescence, obsolete, redesign, spam

Time For A Re-Design To Re-Align…

September 30, 2014 by MzD

FIT

That was my choice for my annual #WordOfTheYear . It’s basically the last quarter of the year, and it’s time to review how the word is fitting in, so to speak:)

The concept behind this*  is that when the New Year begins, rather than make a resolution (or several) that are proverbially doomed to fail come February 1st, you select one word that sums up the tone/intention you want to set for the year. Fit felt right for the usual suspect (wanting to get in better shape etc) and, equally so, to be a gauge word for helping me (or us as company) decide what projects to take on, where to place creative efforts and so on.

So far, it’s been a year whereby a long-standing art project has eaten up a huge amount of time. The app “soft-launch” was just this weekend past (see lulusuite.ca), and as this project comes to an end, other client projects still need tending and cultivating. So the luxury of choosing what projects might be a good fit still feels a bit in the future. That said, part of FIT is to eventually re-design so that our values (aesthetic, business, technical, quirks and quarks…) shine through and attract the right clients and projects that are the best fit for us and the client.

Soon come. Soon come.

======================================

Laundry List of Questions to Consider for a Site Re-design

  1. WHY

    First of all Why do you want / need a re-design?
    You might say, “well, our site is not mobile-responsive (if you know what that means) or it needs to be mobile-friendly”. But perhaps what you really mean, is you are losing customers, because a huge proportion of your visitors (you’re tracking them right?) are on mobile devices, and when they land on your site they can’t read anything, so off they go, to another site.

    Another Why might be that your business has changed in some fundamental way – from services to products, from offering workshops to selling e-books – you get the picture. If the content is so out of date (especially if you can’t edit that content) that it no longer reflects your core business, that’s a fairly compelling Why.

  2. WHAT

    What materials do I need to get ready? Which might include:  New larger, magnificent photographs of us, our products, our zeitgest….
    Photographs do have a higher conversion rate than plain text, which is not to say, copy ain’t crucial. That’s also no doubt on your list.  Copy. Hire a writer. Hire a translator. Hire us.

  3. WHERE

    Which is really still WHY. Can people find your site? Maybe it doesn’t matter. You’re a small business and you only need your site to support those business cards you hand out. Still, wouldn’t it be nice if a local search, using the terms that fit your business, turned up your site in the results?

  4. WHO

    Who are doing this for?
    Who is your target audience? Not just a 18-34 man, or 44-53 woman, or an 81-89 senior. What are their values, their habits, their raison d’etre?

  5. WHEN

    When was the last time your site was updated? 2011? 2007? If it’s been a few years, it probably needs a re-do for reasons like the first – WHY > Answer > Mobile technology has changed they way most of our customers view our website.
    Also – when do you want this to be done. Map out a timeline.

Art is Long, Life Is Short

 

 

(Art is Long – Life is Short)

*(inspired by singer/songwriter Christine Kane and others)

Filed Under: General, Process Tagged With: fit, process, redesign, time managment

Old Websites – Are They Obsolete or Not?

November 8, 2013 by MzD

What To Do With Old Websites – Retire or Realign…

A few years ago, a friend of mine announced she might retire as an artist, at the ripe old age of 36. Another friend back East made a similar pronouncement, although he was a few years older than her. Neither have retired, but both took a hiatus. I recently remembered their dramatic statements and started thinking about retirement of a different sort.

For just over 10 years, from 1999-2010 I was very active in the net-art community, producing dozens of art websites. If the lifespan of a website is akin to the doggie years metaphor (1 dog year = 7 human years ), then these sites are seriously out of date.  Last year, in 2012 I created a year-long daily photographic blog [The Obsolescence Project], considering things that were out of date, but I (gasp) used a free wordpress.com site and thus didn’t design the site, so I exclude it from these musings.

Currently I have about six public web projects that are still active online (there are more, but they were produced anonymously, which is another story, so they can choose their own blissful retirement). Almost all of the sites rely partially on Flash, some completely. Flash is basically obsolete. While not technically so, especially where compiled code (as opposed to visible html5 code) is desired, and for games, for projects I’m referring to it is done and dusted. Those sites just aren’t viewable on the iPhone, iPad and who knows where else. So I have to make a decision. Do I retire these sites completely – press delete – and leave documentation (screenshots/text) behind, or is there a way to re-align them with today’s contemporary web standards?

3 Case Studies:

  • pinch
    Screenshot from Excerpts From An Archive

    Excerpts from An Archive, 2001) is partly related to how one searched the web in 2001. Excerpts considers the nature of digital archives, history and fiction. Hand-coded with HTML using tables! At that time I used to get emails from folks asking me for information about their relatives – it was quite touching. The site only uses a wee bit of Flash, so it still hangs together. But it’s not mobile-responsive, it’s looks quite small – in those days you had to be quite conservative with images, dial-up internet might have even still be around, can’t remember.

  • Translations/Traductions
    Screen Shot of Translations/Traductions: L’Historia Mi Absolvera

    Translations/Traductions – produced as a result of a residency at La Chambre Blanche in Quebec City, a series of Flash vignettes created from open source archival movies and texts. Texts translated in google, imagery ‘translated’ (vectorized) in Flash. Blend of interactive and non-interactive animations. 2007 launch date. This one is all Flash – hence invisible on many (read Apple) mobile platforms (including the iPad).

  • Screen shot of Bird
    Screen shot of Bird

    Bird (2004) – A petit homage to Dizzy Gillespie + Charlie Bird Parker. This one is all Flash too. Looking back, I have a fondness for the effort that it took to create. The excerpt from the song repeats and the archival video that has been modified shifts each time. Does nostalgia merit a redesign?

STATUS PLAN

Excerpts from An Archive – This site gets a lot of traction. It has been featured in two books, one grad thesis, and various festivals. It merits a re-design/re-alignment to bring it up to speed. However, some of the little nifty (in 2001 terms) features that were part of it will just have to be lost. This also means a loss (which is already there) of some of the internal logic. C’est la vie.

Translations/Traductions: There are five animations which each are their own story. I still like them.
The non-interactive ones I will look at converting to video. The interactive ones, like the one I featured will, alas, have to stay as is. I don’t see how html5 can handle it all. Of course, I’m open to suggestion. Put up stills for those who can’t see Flash.

Bird: Given this one is all Flash, but non-interactive, it could easily be reborn as a video. The only loss would be the full scalability that the vector format allows. There would a gain too – in that viewers could pause to actually read the text that scrolls by, I didn’t fully recognize the speed then.

Should I stay or should I go

FINAL THOUGHTS

The three other still live sites I haven’t mentioned are probably going to shift towards documentation only, as their internal logic involved a process of getting input from the public and that process is done.

My rationale for choosing to resuscitate, to whatever degree, these sites has a lot to do with perceived value. Do I still think these works have any value to me as an artist? With the Archives, given that it is still out there, and receives active traffic, it’s not really a question of should, but of when and how.

For TT and Bird, it’s more of a personal reason – ie: I like them, they stay.

For the rest, if I had more time/energy/_______, I might revamp them. But probably it’s best to document, archive and let them gracefully fade away.

If you have old (or ancient) sites that you are wondering if they should be re-purposed for the “mobile web”, here are three questions to ask to help you decide:

  1. Does the site still receive any traffic?
  2. Does it still speak to the heart of your practice/business?
  3. What technologies does it use and how challenging would it be to migrate them?

If the answer to 1 is zero, it’s probably easiest to delete. It’s done, then it’s no longer clutter. Documentation is always a good idea (copy as text, or take screen shots).
If it’s yes, that’s a good hint to bring it up to speed.

If the answer to 2 is no, then I vote for document and delete. Again, why have stuff out there that is attracting people who are interested in content that is obsolete to you.
If it’s yes, that’s probably the most important reason to import it to a new format.

For number 3, technologies: Depending on the type of content, you’re either in for a fairly easy, smooth transition or in for a rocky ride if the content is video in some archaic format and you no longer have the original files (or the original files are no longer readable!) or if it uses Flash animations etc, then the amount of time it will take to re-format creeps up and up. Then you have to ask yourself if you really have the time / money / interest in this thing they call the mobile web.

p.s. Always document.

Filed Under: Techie, Work Tagged With: adaptation, art, change, decisions, digital clutter, Flash, mobile, mobile web, net art, realign, redesign, retirement, technology, time, web design standards, website redesign

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