Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Introduction
- 1 Internet and Journalism: An Introduction
- 2 The History and Evolution of the Internet
- 3 Multimediality, Interactivity and Hypertextuality
- 4 Annotative Reporting and Open-source Journalism
- 5 Computer Assisted Journalism or Reporting
- 6 Preparing Online Packages
- 7 Web Authoring and Publishing
- 8 Revenue, Ethics and Law
- 9 Gatekeeping: The Changing Roles of Online Journalism
- 10 Digital Determinism: Access and Barrier
- 11 Convergence and Broadband
- 12 The Network Paradigm
- Glossary
- Index
7 - Web Authoring and Publishing
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 26 October 2011
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Introduction
- 1 Internet and Journalism: An Introduction
- 2 The History and Evolution of the Internet
- 3 Multimediality, Interactivity and Hypertextuality
- 4 Annotative Reporting and Open-source Journalism
- 5 Computer Assisted Journalism or Reporting
- 6 Preparing Online Packages
- 7 Web Authoring and Publishing
- 8 Revenue, Ethics and Law
- 9 Gatekeeping: The Changing Roles of Online Journalism
- 10 Digital Determinism: Access and Barrier
- 11 Convergence and Broadband
- 12 The Network Paradigm
- Glossary
- Index
Summary
According to CERN, web authoring is the process of creating web documents, that is, web pages or collections of such pages on the same or related subjects that can be displayed on a screen using a program called a web browser. Web publishing is the process of making web documents available to the public on web servers.
Several excellent articles and tutorials on this subject are available online, free of charge. Two particularly useful ones are: Web Style Guide (www.webstyleguide.com) by Patrick J. Lynch and Sarah Horton, which is also available in book form, and John Shiple's tutorial on information architecture on the Webmonkey site for website development (http://hotwired.lycos.com/webmonkey/design/site_building/tutorials/tutorial.html). The topic which both of these stress as being of particular importance in web authoring is information architecture.
Deciding the Information Architecture
The first step in designing a website should be deciding its information architecture (although this has often not been the case in practice, especially outside the advanced industrial countries). In Staple's words:
Information architecture is the foundation for great Web design. It is the blueprint of the site upon which all other aspects are built – form, function, metaphor, navigation and interface, interaction, and visual design. Initiating the IA process is the first thing you should do when designing a site.
The term information architecture (IA) refers to the structural design of shared information environments or spaces.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Online JournalismA Basic Text, pp. 129 - 150Publisher: Foundation BooksPrint publication year: 2006