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Agriculture, skepticism, politics

Incomplete rollout

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I woke up today and, as is my habit on Saturday mornings, delayed checking my email for as long as possible. Finally mustering the urge to consume the required caffeine, I opened Evolution, the email client I use more for the name than functionality. This lovely message from home greeted me.

What the hell happened to your real site – I can’t find a calendar to save my soul, can’t find when and where you play next and can’t tell who is writing what – nor what is being talked about!! What time do you play at McGraw’s on Dec. 7! -Mom

I guess that’s what I get for rolling out an incomplete website. We’ll have a calendar up soon. In the meantime, Lucas and I are playing at Professor’s tonight. The band is playing at McGraw’s Friday. Like G says, the party starts when you get there. We’ll start between 8 p.m. and 10 p.m.

The dayjob

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I recently responded to some questions posed by the National Auctioneers Association regarding good website design. These are my thoughts.

> What are the essential elements of a good website?

Good websites are viewable and accessible from any computer or device using any browser or software. I think a site should look the same on a Mac running Safari as it does on Windows running Internet Explorer. I think sites should require as little additional technology like Flash or Java as possible. I design using XHTML and CSS because it’s light and doesn’t require any additional components. A good website shouldn’t have advertising or require or even suggest that the user navigate away from that site.

> Which websites do you like?

I like the newer, standards-based websites like WordPress, Facebook and mozilla.com because they’re clean and elegant and don’t have anything moving or making noise without specific requests from the user. They don’t have confusing navigation like drop-down menus that reduce accessibility.
> What are the goals of your company’s website?

Our company’s site aims to be as simple as possible to allow anyone to place bids on any item from any device. We acknowledge that most users want to find items within auctions, not information about us, so that’s the aspect on which we focus the users initial attention.
> If you could give any advice to someone considering creating a website
> or revising their existing website, what would your advice be?

For an auctioneer looking to create or redesign a website, it is important to make the correct assumptions about the intentions of the users. I believe users want to find auctions, so the most important part of the homepage or first page of a site should be the calendar. If the user is seriously looking for institutional information like the auctioneer’s history or contact information, he or she will be more than willing to click a link to navigate to that section. Also, the Internet is the most powerful marketing tool. The auctioneer who pictures every item and describes it on the website will always be more powerful than the auctioneer who types a paragraph listing the items for sale and posts a picture gallery.

> In your experience, what is the biggest mistake someone could make
> regarding their website?

The biggest mistake someone could make building a website is to use Flash without offering an alternative content delivery mechanism. Also, a user shouldn’t have to do anything other than load a page to get the content. Mouse-overs and drop-down menus only make it harder for the user to obtain content and may even obfuscate the navigational structure of the site.

The gospel according to Aaron.

Friday, Saturday, what's the difference?

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It seems we’re playing on Saturday night in Hays. We were so excited to play that we thought the show was sooner than it is. If you come to see us tonight at Professor’s, you get free beer on Saturday.

Hungry

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We’ve rolled up a new website
Complete with fried chicken and cupcakes

Two shows on the menu

Friday, tomorrow night, at Professor’s in Hays. Lucas and I will be picnicking Hays. Bring chopsticks.

Friday, 7 December, will be the McGraw’s Manhattan feast that will live in infamy for one reason or another. It will be a full band meal complete with lightly browned, fruity-vegetable Lucas Maddy; over-easy eggs and dairy Chris Goering; freshly baked bread-and-starch Mason Powell; and a very ala cart Aaron Traffas (condiments, for those of you keeping score at home).

If you’re still hungry, or need a brew to wash it all down, check the new website for the video of Wayne opening a beer bottle with a laptop. Digg it. It’s on the second page.

Eat on,
Aaron

Don't offer PDF only

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I don’t know how many of you create websites or offer content, but here’s a brown nugget for you.

For the love of god and everything holy, do not use PDF as the first line of content conveyance. I was shopping for NAS devices yesterday and it seemed like each one wanted to offer me a PDF instead of a web page listing the specs. A practice more lazy than functional, I would like to think it’s being phased out in favor of accessible content. I’d like to think a lot of things.

New engine. vroom.

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I finally gave in to the ways of the world and recognized that the reason I haven’t posted anything since July was because I didn’t have a WordPress blog. At least that’s what I tell myself.

 Give me a few days to get the old content loaded and the old domain redirected and maybe I’ll come up with something worth writing.