There are five (5) paradigms that are particularly salient for designing and evaluating interactive systems. I’m going to skip the third and last ones called Visibility and Thickness of Practice. The remaining three are broken down here with three questions you need to ask yourselves regarding your Museum 2.0. The three themes are “Thinking Through Doing”, “Performance”, and my favorite “Risk”.
White can be a challenging color to work with. Black and white are at two ends of the spectrum. One on top of the other can be hard on the eye. Great tricks in web design have been designing with colors that work as compliments to gray tones. Check out these museums, libraries, and galleries who are using white effectively on their front page.
Check out the participatory and/or smart nature of these interactive experiences that these website lead. This is next phase of website information and engagement. Do some out of the box thinking with the your projects. After all, there’s so many ways we could experience information and stories. What’s your creative way of conveying such material? Look at these precedents.
Check out the participatory and/or smart nature of these interactive experiences that these website lead. This is next phase of website information and engagement. Do some out of the box thinking with the your projects. After all, there’s so many ways we could experience information and stories. What’s your creative way of conveying such material? Look at these precedents.
Designing a taxonomy system helps the user filter content. It’s another way for both organizing and navigating content. I find this to be one of the most intriguing things when comparing the web ten years ago to today. Learn and check out a couple of guidelines and examples here.
The Internet started in the 1960s as a way for government researchers to share information. Computers in the ’60s were large and immobile and in order to make use of information stored in any one computer, one had to either travel to the site of the computer or have magnetic computer tapes sent through the conventional postal system.