Blossoms and Tourists

(I extended this entry a bit, and moved its timestamp back a few hours so that I could say: today is 04-04-04!)

The cherry blossoms were at their peak yeasterday, so Amy and I spent the day strolling around the Tidal Basin in a clockwise direction, enduring cold winds and heavy tourist traffic to admire the trees in full bloom. We started at the Smithsonian Metro, walked west along Independence Ave, and swung left on 14th St SW. As it “turns” out, we had turned a block too soon, and had to deal with a walk through a tunnel and a couple of extra pedestrian crosswalks before rejoining the crowd of sightseers. (Note to self: turn left at 15th St SW next time.)

Walking the 3 km circumference of the Tidal Basin took about three hours, with a pause at the Jefferson Memorial to read the writing on the wall, and numerous camera stops at any moment that the sun deigned to peek out from behind the swift-moving clouds. The whole place was a mob. Thousands of people choked the walkways and bridges around the Tidal Basin, sometimes overflowing off the sidewalks onto the street, slowing passing vehicle traffic. The situation was worsened by recent rains, with dirty puddles blocking walkways and paths, forcing sightseers to walk in slow single file or to squelch through muddy grass. The Jefferson Memorial was packed as well, tourists milling about the open spaces, sitting on the marble steps, snapping away gleefully at each other and at the view. It was both fun and annoying at the same time.

We skipped the FDR Memorial in favor of a faster walk around the Basin, and reached a somewhat looser point in the crowd towards West Potomac Park. No places to sit under the blossoms, however, as the ground remained mostly damp and muddy.

It was sad to see the wall around the Washington Monument, still blocking access to the Monument grounds and further aggravating the tourist traffic. Amy and I squeezed through the worst of the crunch and headed for the Mall to stroll toward the National Gallery, just to say hello to the Girl in the Red Hat.

Despite the crowds, it was an excellent day. Photos here.

April Fools 2004 Roundup

March for Web Standards has moved. Please adjust your links accordingly.

Update, 10am 2 Apr 2004: What? It’s Friday? I thought it was Saturday. <grumble> #

Update, 1am 2 Apr 2004: Well, that was fun. Hits from Boingboing, Mathowie, WaSP, and a bunch of other places, with my bandwidth intact. Anyway, I’m stuck in Baltimore right now, having missed the last train back to DC, and starting tomorrow I’m going to enjoy a nice, long, relaxing weekend with Amy at the Cherry Blossom Festival. More words soon on standards, markup, color palettes, image compression, and designing for traffic. Have a good Palm Sunday weekend and remember to set your clocks ahead. #

Happy April 1st. In addition to M4WeSt, there’s more craziness going on elsewhere on the web:

M4WeSt

Introducing the First Annual March for Web Standards, Washington, DC. We’re taking the fight for clean, structural, standards-compliant markup straight to the seat of power. Down with <font> tags! Down with spacer GIFs! Down with table-based layouts! Web Standards forever! Long live stylesheets!

(By the way, the toaster offer is serious, but only for metro-accessible DC residents.)

Update: High-profile inbound links to the March for Web Standards April Fools’ gag: Mathowie, WaSP, BoingBoing, Waxy, and more (blogdex track).

CSS Linkage

Valerie was asking for some good starting points on CSS-based layout and design, so here are some of the links I sent her way:

The comments are open to additional CSS links which I may have missed or forgotten.

Travel in Style

Travelocity has redesigned, and is now laid out in CSS. Navigation appears to be some variation of the suckerfish, and the dropdowns break rather badly in Opera 7, dissolving into a mess of unfloated, overlapping list items which loop in and out of a :hover state repeatedly whenever the mouse is over them. In Safari, only the first item in each nav list drops down; the rest are hidden away from the user’s eyes, denying Travelocity the views and profits of Mac OS X users everywhere. This effort to move towards cleaner, more usable, standards-friendly design is admirable, but till Travelocity’s cross-platform deficiencies can be fixed, I’ll be sticking with my preferred travel site for now, thank you.

Sippey has written/drawn up some visual analysis of Travelocity and other travel sites. I’m not sold on Expedia’s “front-and-center” treatment of the flight search box as the best scheme. Remember the “visual Z”: On first viewing, readers and users tend to scan newspaper, magazine, and website layouts in a quick “Z” above the fold, starting at the top left of the page and ending at the bottom right. It’s most important to put the focal points of pivotal elements — such as primary navigation or reservation forms — right where the Z starts. Center-of-the-page positioning is not terribly wrong, of course, as long as the form is designed to be prominent enough to catch the viewer’s attention, but on a subliminal level, the user only sees the reservation form when beginning the diagonal leg of the “Z-scan,” thus lessening its perceived importance for precious seconds before more detailed reading comes in.

It might be argued that Travelocity and Orbitz get the “Z” wrong, placing the reservations form below primary navigation and branding, but it must be remembered that we’re talking about scanning here, not reading. The user’s vision takes in a wide swath of detail, making instinctive connections between borders, headers, and boxes. In Travelocity’s case, we first see the logo, the navigation bar, the reservations form, and the special promo graphic — all important elements. In Expedia’s case, we see a logo, a white space, a banner/textad, and a bunch of tabs in the moments before we even start to notice the reservations form.

These are all unconscious thought processes that occur in the first few seconds that a page is viewed, and those seconds count. As I constantly told my graphic design staffers back in my Guidon days, the designer’s job is mostly subliminal. A good layout is barely noticed, introducing the reader to the content and keeping them with it to the end. Or, as usability guru Steve Krug puts it, “Don’t Make Me Think.”

Spring Cache Cleaning

Just need to dump some links and text which have been accumulating in my desktop notepad:

Ecleo Passes Go

Ruben Ecleo out on bail. Ecleo was the leader of a cult which revered him as a reincarnated Messiah, even after the bloody gunfight which accompanied his arrest on suspicion of murdering his wife. One million pesos (about $18,000) bail was granted, ostensibly for “health reasons,” though Ecleo’s health seems well enough for him to even run for mayor, despite the standing charges against him. “Joseph Estrada syndrome.” Heh.

Previously written about here. (Be sure to read the PBMA cultists’ comments! They’re keepers, each and every single one.)