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Résumé
Résumé
Praise for the previous edition:
'Gives an excellent insight into the main issues of creating a website and offers a good foundation of knowledge.' - i.net
Producing for Web 2.0 is a clear and practical guide to the planning, set up and management of a website in web 2.0. It gives readers an overview of the current technologies available for online communications and shows how to use them for maximum effect when planning a website.
Producing for Web 2.0 sets out the practical toolkit needed for web design and content management. It is supported by a regularly updated and comprehensive Companion Website at: www.producingforweb2.com where readers can see examples of programming and demonstrations of concepts discussed in the book, as well as trying things out themselves.
Producing for Web 2.0 includes:
illustrated examples of good design and content advice on content, maintenance and how to use sites effectively tips on using multimedia, including video, audio, flash, and images a chapter on ethics and internet regulations for journalists and writers tutorials for the main applications used in website design step by step guides to difficult areas with screenshots guides to good practice for all those involved in publishing news online.Critiques (1)
Critique de Choice
Whittaker (University College Falmouth, UK) has updated his course resource on Web production, now in its third edition (2nd ed., Web Production for Writers and Journalists, 2002; 1st ed., Producing for the Web, CH, Apr'01, 38-4501). Emphasis is on important and fundamental topics of Web development from pre- to postproduction. The author offers sound general principles and sufficiently details projects ranging from creating simple static Web pages to crafting a sophisticated, dynamic, Web 2.0 enabled portal. Comprehensiveness is not the intent. Whittaker demonstrates the basics and then provides ample citations to further sources through a categorized bibliography and additional links on the companion Web site . Many black-and-white illustrations are used to good effect to demonstrate sample applications (e.g., Dreamweaver, Audacity, Expose, MediaWiki, and Joomla!) for Web development. Color illustrations would have further enriched the presentation. Though well written, the book has some errors. The first Web browser was not called NeXT but rather the WorldWideWeb, later renamed Nexus. Errors in code examples will be frustrating to new Web developers. Neither Routledge nor the companion Web site has identified and corrected the errata. Despite the errors, readers will find very good, helpful guidance. Summing Up: Recommended. Lower- and upper-division undergraduates; two-year technical program students; general readers. M. Mounts Dartmouth College
Table des matières
Preface |
1 Introduction |
2 Pre-production |
3 Designing for the web |
4 Creating Dynamic Sites |
5 Using Multimedia |
6 Web 2.0 tools |
7 Content management systems |
8 Writing, ethics and regulation |
9 Post-production XHTML reference guide CSS reference guide |
Glossary of terms |
Resources |