2.0Culture v1.1
Web 2.0 Design
... in a nutshell
Traduction en Français - La culture Web 2.0 et le design web, conseils et exemples
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Preface:
Please, whenever I am refering to Web2.0/Ajax – I am NOT talking about the technology itself. Apparently I wasn’t able to find a proper term for that very popular design scheme appearing quite often lately in TechCrunch entries or similar reviews. It’s due to the fact that most of these “web applications” are using Ajax technology and benefit from the interconnection of web services (Web 2.0) – so that’s why I tend to call them “Web2.0/Ajax”. I think I’ll name it ”2.0Culture” for now. Right. So let’s stick to that.
In order to get attention to your brand-new 2.0Culture backed website, you need to bring up some decent “up-to-date” design with it. No, I am not talking about CSS instead of tables or suchlike. I am talking about simplicity combined with big fonts, shiny shaders and very, very strange brand names. Despite the fact that you need to do your homework learning about tags, clouds and plenty more of these catchy words – you can still be a great “new wave” designer – without being a pro 2.0Culture technology geek.
Right, let’s get it started while it’s hot.
First of all, check out these sites for a basic overview. Try to identify the major similarities between the various concepts. All of them seem to origin from the very same developer. Even though there’s no guideline (except this one here, wooho!) on that kind of design – it seems that the Bay Area is handing around some secret guide for that particular design scheme. Look here:
https://gtalkr.com/
http://www.flock.com/
http://instantdomainsearch.com/
http://www.silverorange.com/
http://www.read.io/
http://www.noodly.com/
http://instantdomainsearch.com/
As you might notice, these designs are pretty similar. But wait, the 2.0Culture has much more to show than that. This is just a small excerpt and we are going to put a particular focus on that kind of design for this article. There are millions of other sites, looking totally different while still being recognized as a “hmm, this looks like 2.0Culture” design. If you want to learn about the technology behind it, use our SanFran friend, Google.
Major MUST-DO’s:
- Rounded Shapes
- Shades
- Sans Serif
- Pastell v2.0
- Footers
- Buttons
- Font-Size: Oversized
- Descriptive HTML (XML style)
Major DO NOT’s:
- Java Applets (Script is fine though)
- Animated GIFs (the blinky ones)
- 100% Flash Websites
- Visible tables
Right, let’s get our feet wet and start right off with:
Rounded Shapes
Ok, this sort of break-boring-html-rules trend seems to have got quite a must-have nowadays. Frankly, I also prefer rounded shapes over tight rectangles. Same with women, I guess. Nevertheless, some 2.0Culture providers do still stick to the rectangle design schemes. No problem at all, have a look at writeboard.com – their editor is a rectangled interface. Nice as well. To try a “psychological” approach to this difference, I might point out these facts:
- Rounded shapes look more inventive, younger, flexible and experimental
- Rectangles do impress with professionality, big-business, trustworthy
So, this is my personal interpretation. Flames welcome. But take your time and think about it yourself. Check out some different designs and make your decision on what’s happening “inside yourself” while looking at them. I guess a decent interconnection between professionality and a fresh young breeze of inventive Bay Area mushrooms might be our perfect fit for this project. How do we achieve that? Simple: Combine. We got 2 solutions:
- Use a rectangled website container and rounded shapes for interface boxes like content divs and navigation.
- Use a rounded-shape website container and keep the content divs and navigation very straight.
It’s up to you what you prefer for your project. I do indeed like both. Though I got to say that using the second approach might be a bit easier to implement for the average web designer. You can do a simple Photoshop design for that purpose. Might take you some 15 minutes to get it done. To be honest, I think the trend is going towards a non-bordered website including lots of rounded shapes (which is the first approach then). So get ready to step up a gear and dig some more CSS guides.
I have put together a list of websites that go into detail on how to implement a rounded-shape design: