This weekend I spent a day at CommunityNext, a set-menu conference with a great line-up. I learned some great things about community, some of which I look forward to sharing during the week in lists.
First up, The Four SkinnyCorp Commandments.
Adam DuVander on keeping it simple
This weekend I spent a day at CommunityNext, a set-menu conference with a great line-up. I learned some great things about community, some of which I look forward to sharing during the week in lists.
First up, The Four SkinnyCorp Commandments.
It’s one of the largest sites around. Everybody knows and loves what Craigslist does. But most designers will tell you they don’t like how Craigslist looks.
Here’s the current site, in all its textual, link-happy glory:
In 2004, Charlie Park thought he’d try a redesign. He certainly wasn’t the first to think about it, but his is the earliest I could find. Here’s what he came up with:
The blues went to red and the site gained a little more white space breathing room.
Then about a year ago, a panel at the South by Southwest Interactive conference made a splash with this:
It has even more white space, slightly bigger fonts, and a happier blue link color.
Christian Montoya started with the SXSW redesign, shrank the header and added a whole lot of thin grey lines or borders:
Matt Haughey also worked off the SXSW redesign. Mainly, he thinks “the top bar is all wrong:”
It’s interesting that while all these redesigns attempt to make Craigslist look and feel differently, none really attacked on the information clutter. Of course, that may be because there isn’t a much simpler front page for Craigslist without increasing the number of times their users have to click.
Could Craigslist be a better experience if it looked better or acted differently? Does that mean they should go for it?
If it ain’t broke, don’t fix it, right? The biggest reason that Craigslist will probably never consider any of these–or their own–redesigns is that they don’t really need to.
Did I miss any? Let me know if you know of any other Craigslist redesigns.
There’s a really great point in the middle of Nick Harris’ post on creating a pleasant user experience:
Asking users to break their habits in order to use your software is a really tough sell.
He goes on to give some great examples, my favorite of which is breaking the back button. In fact, I’m realizing now that we did just that with the refund project and I’m wondering whether we really had much of a choice.
The point here is it doesn’t really matter if I’ve made a choice based on code efficiency or if I think some convention is wrong. If the program model isn’t in line with the user model, I’m making things easier on me instead of the people who matter.
It seems that even though there are more hotspots than ever in Portland, people still want to find the closest, best WiFi. I get several calls a week from people who think I’m MetroFi, the blanket WiFi company.
It’s smalltime traffic, but it’s still great growth. It’s two times July’s numbers and has me optimistic about continuing to build a useful site.
In the meantime, some popular spots:
I haven’t been to any of these. I’ll have to try them out.
Back in early December at a Portland Web Innovators meeting, Ryan and I talked about finding a connection between his net worth tracking site and my income tax filing site.
What we came up with was a little head-to-head tool that lets people drill down to determine the best use for their tax refund, assuming they’ll be getting one. We casually built it, spending a few minutes here and there on evenings and weekends. Ryan and I were completely virtual. I haven’t seen him since December, because he’s way off in the suburbs, a whole seventeen miles away.
Today, we release the project to find out what you think. What’s the best use for your income tax refund? Find out here.