WebsiteDays.com create your web site free, Hosting, Coding, E-commerce, Free Website Builder. Download free website builder to create your website! Personal, and ECommerce website builders...

WebsiteDays.com for germany dornstetten

Click on your region below to contact a Websitedays.com designer, or Websitedays.com sales person for info about Online Website builder system.

You can also send an email to

and we can forward your enquiry to respective designers in your area.

Aachen Aalen Ahrensburg
Aichtal Allensbach Alpirsbach
Altensteig Alzey Andernach
Ansbach Aschaffenburg Aue
Augsburg Augustdorf Bacharach
Backnang Bad Bentheim Bad Honningen
Bad Homburg Bad Kreuznach Bad Nauheim
Bad Neuenahr-Ahrweiler Bad Neustadt Bad Salzuflen
Bad Sobernheim Bad Soden Bad Wildbad
Bad Wilsnack Baden-Baden Balingen
Bamberg Barleben Barmstedt
Bautzen Bayreuth Beilstein
Berchtesgaden Bergheim Bergisch-Gladbach
Berlin Bernried Biberach
Bielefeld Bingen Bischofsheim an der Rhon
Bitburg Blaubeuren Bochum
Bonn Borgholzhausen Bottrop
Braunschweig Breisach Breitnau
Bremen Bretten Briedel
Buchdorf Budingen Buhl
Burgdorf Burgebrach Burghausen
Burscheid Butzbach Buxtehude
Castrop-Rauxel Celle Chemnitz
Clausthal-Zellerfeld Coburg Cochem
Colditz Cologne Cottbus
Cremlingen Cuxhaven Dachau
Darmstadt Deidesheim Dieburg
Dorpen Dornstadt Dornstetten
Dortmund Dresden Drochtersen
Duren Dusseldorf Duisburg
Eberdingen-Hochdorf Ebersberg Eching
Eisenberg Emden Erbach
Erding Erfurt Erkrath
Erlangen Eschborn Essen
Esslingen Ettlingen Euskirchen
Feldkirchen-Westerham Filderstadt Fischerhude
Flensburg Flintsbach Forchheim
Frankenberg Frankenthal Frankfurt am Main
Frasdorf Freiberg Freiburg
Freising Freudenstadt Friedberg
Friedrichshafen Furth Bavaria Fussen
Furtwangen Fussgonheim Garbsen
Garching Garmisch-Partenkirchen Geisenheim
Gelsenkirchen Geseke Gevelsberg
Giessen Gladbeck Glucksburg
Gorsroth Gottingen Gotha
Gottmadingen Gräfelfing Grafenwohr
Grasbrunn Greifswald Grevenbroich
Grobenzell Gunzburg Gutersloh
Haan Hagen Hallbergmoos
Halle Hamburg Hameln
Hanau Hannover Hartenholm
Hausham Hechingen Heidelberg
Heidenheim Heilbronn Heiligkreuzsteinach
Hemer Hennef Herford
Herne Herrenberg Heusenstamm
Hildesheim Hodenhagen Hosbach
Hoxter Hof Hofheim am Taunus
Hohne Hullhorst Hurth
Idar-Oberstein Ilmenau Ingelfingen-Criesbach
Ingelheim Ingolstadt Isenbuttel
Iserlohn Isernhagen Ismaning
Ispringen Issum Itzehoe
Jena Kaarst Kaiserslautern
Kandern Karlsruhe Kassel
Kelsterbach Kemnitz Kiedrich
Kiel Kirchheim Koblenz
Konigslutter Konstanz Krefeld
Lahr Landshut Langen
Laudenbach Lehrte Leinfelden-Echterdingen
Leipzig Leverkusen Limburg
Lindau Lorch Ludwigshafen
Lubeck Ludenscheid Luneburg
Lunen Magdeburg Mainz
Malterdingen Mannheim Marburg
Marktheidenfeld Marl Massing
Mechernich Meckenbeuren Meissen
Mellrichstadt Memmingen Meppen
Merzig Mettmann Metzingen
Minden Monchengladbach Moerfelden-Walldorf
Monschau Montabaur Mulheim
Munster Munstermaifeld Munich
Munster Murnau Nabburg
Nagold Naumburg Nettetal
Neumarkt Neumunster Neunkirchen
Neuss Niedernberg Nordhausen
Nurburg Nuremberg Oberammergau
Oberaudorf Obernburg Oberstdorf
Oldenburg Oranienburg Osnabruck
Osterholz-Scharmbeck Osthofen Paderborn
Passau Pattensen Peine
Peiting Pfaffenhofen Pforzheim
Pleidelsheim Potsdam Prien am Chiemsee
Puderbach Puttlingen Quedlinburg
Ramstein Miesenbach Ransbach-Baumbach Rastatt
Rastede Ratingen Ravensburg
Regensburg Reichelsheim Reichshof-Mittelagger
Reken Remseck Rendsburg
Reutlingen Riesa Rosenheim
Rostock Rothenburg ob der Tauber Russelsheim
Ruhpolding Saarbrucken Salzhemmendorf
Sarstedt Schrobenhausen Schuby
Schwaebisch Gmuend Schwäbisch Hall Schwangau
Schweinfurt Schwenningen Schwerin
Schwetzingen Seebruck Seebull
Sindelfingen Singen Solingen
Springe St Augustin St Ingbert
Starnberg Stedten Steinau
Stolberg Stuttgart Suhl
Sulzfeld Taunusstein Teltow
Titisee-Neustadt Tornesch Travemunde
Trier Trollenhagen Tubingen
Ulm Usingen Vechta
Velbert Verden Wadgassen
Waiblingen Waldbronn Wallduern
Warmensteinach Warstein Warzfelden
Wassenberg Weiden Weimar
Weinstadt-Beutelsbach Weissensee Werder
Wertheim Wesel Wiesbaden
Windhagen Winnenden Wipperfuerth
Wittenberg Wittstock Wolfenbuttel
Wolfsburg Wurzburg Wuppertal
Zeppelinheim Zirndorf Zittau
Zulpich Zwickau Zwiesel

»   Web-site designing Pillars (part2)

Article submitted in category: Web Design And Development
Tags: | pixels | html | screen | optimization | web-page | width | resolution | space | ws | monitors | way |

Web-site designing Pillars (part2) by: Pavel Lenshin

USABILITY

Usability is what makes your WS pleasant to deal with. While everyone defines personally for her(him)self how to make design nice to look at, memorable (in respect to branding) and serve customer/business needs in the best way possible, the technical side of usability can and should be corrected using the standard requirements.

SOURCE CODE OPTIMIZATION

Firstly about the four problems that come to my mind with "dirty" HTML source code:

Potential cross-browser conflicts as some particular useless Tags (a piece of HTML source code) may be neglected by one browser but create some visual errors, when viewed in other browser.

The more useless HTML Tags web-page has, the more drive space it occupies.

As the derivative of the previous problem, the more size of that web-page, the longer it takes to visitor to load and view it.

Search engines like plain and clear textual information for easy search and scan. By having a lot of useless pieces of HTML code, you prevent SE spiders to proper index your web-pages. The result is the obvious decreasing of your Search Engine rankings. That is why Meta Tags correcting is not the only thing you should pay attention to.

Statistic shows that more then 85% of all WSs online demands graphics or HTML code optimization. That is actually a common problem, the core of which lies in the use of highly popular "home" web editors like FrontPage or other.

The "winner" among the worst is well-known Netscape Composer, due to the extremely "dirty" HTML code it generates while editing old or creating new web-pages. If you have ever used Composer and no one have "cleaned" those web-pages afterwards, they definitely contain a lot of HTML "garbage".

Based on my own experience every 50Kb Netscape Composer's web-page can be easily optimized to the 40Kb file size or less, as a simple result of the deleting junk HTML tags. If you implement Cascade Style Sheet and HTML compressor you will get the same, but "clean & shiny" web-page totaling 25-30Kb (40-50% space savings) with the enhanced visual effects.

The example above shows saving on a single web-page, but if we speak in terms of 50-60 pages WS, that occupy (without graphics) 3-5Mb of hard drive space, the potential savings as a result of HTML optimization may reach 1-3Mb. So if you are experiencing the lack of hard drive space with your hosting provider, the solution to that problem lies in simple WS optimization. It doesn't only save a lot of space, but, as we know, eliminates potential cross-browser mistakes, helps SE spiders to properly index your web-pages and make your visitors' surfing more quick and smooth and therefore pleasant.

GRAPHICS OPTIMIZATION

When we speak about poorly optimized graphics we get two problems: more occupied space and worse load time. Given that the first obstacle may be overcome by acquiring personal server with several Gigabytes of hard drive space, the letter problem will continue to exist as the majority of web visitors have low speed dial-up connection.

To make your graphics optimized on the basic level, you should save it in the proper graphic format. Many popular pictures of eBook covers can be easily optimized simply by re-saving .JPG format into .GIF or vice versa depending on particular file. That tactic alone can bring 15Kb file to occupy 7-10Kb in the matter of 2 min.

The basic math shows that 10 optimized pictures (without HTML optimization) on a web-page are capable to decrease the overall size of it from 120Kb to 70Kb with no visual loss in the quality of picture. Are you aware of statistics how many visitors leave your site just because they are tired to wait until all pictures load? It doesn't mean that you have to simply delete these pictures completely as some people suggest, what it does mean is that they are better to be optimized because in case with eBook covers, they proved to triple selling potential and their absence will be hardly compensated by new visitors.

To choose the right format, follow one simple rule: "If the target picture is more likely to be a photo, with many colors, unshaped objects and different lights, this file should be saved in .JPG format. If, on the contrary, a picture is more likely to consists of a number of vector objects like circles, triangles, squares, doesn't have too many colors or similar to some drown comics, then .GIF format is the best to use."

If it is hard to determine, then save it in both formats and compare quality/size ratio. Not much work, big effect.

Having semi- or fully professional graphic editors will allow you to get even better results by selecting compression rate, smoothness, sharpness of edges – if we speak about .JPG format; or palette, colors, rate of transparency, animation features etc. – if we deal with .GIF format.

Today's technological opportunities are vast, so it is you to decide how deeply you want to "dive in".

CROSS-BROWSER & SCREEN RESOLUTION OPTIMIZATION

The numbers are the following:

2% have outdated 14'' with 640*480 pixels in width and height respectively.

49% of web-surfers use 15" monitors with preferable "standard" screen resolution of 800*600 pixels;

45% surf the web with 17" monitors with reasonable 1024*768 resolution;

4% of users enjoy 18-19" monitors with 1152*864-1280*1024 screen settings.

What should these numbers tell you? The very simple thing – if you created the WS on your 15" monitor, don't assume that it will look as good on other monitors as on yours.

Let me draw several notes here about the tendency that monitor market will follow in the nearest future. First is that all 14" monitors are gradually going to their deserved eternal rest. Even the share of notebooks with 15" TFT screens growing exponentially. There are even several new versions with 16" active matrixes. Don't also forget that notebooks' 14" TFT screen have almost the same diagonal inches as usual 15" CRT (Cathode-ray tube) monitors. Secondly, the number of 15" monitors is also decreasing, due to growing number of 17" monitor owners that is the third point.

One sentence conclusion of the above statistics is that your WS should look fine, at least, under 800*600 and 1024*768 resolutions. This is a market demand to your WS and, as we know, you better not joke with The Market.

Without going deep into theory, there are two ways:

more simple;

more complex.

Both correct, both satisfy the demand above but the letter way, given it is more complex, usually perfectly fits any screen resolution, whether it is 14" or 21" and more favorable to WS space usage.

The easier way would be to make the borders of your web-page (tables of your web-page) to be fixed with certain number of pixels.

The most popular settings are something between 650 to 750 pixels just to fit that 800 pixels width screen under the most popular 15" monitor 800*600 resolution. If you go that way your web-page will have the same look under different sets of resolutions.

If we try to see it at 14" monitor with 640 pixels in width, the unpleasant horizontal scroller would appear because our fixed setting in 700 pixels is wider then 640 and it just won't fit in it. If, on the other hand, we look at our imaginable site under 1152*864 or 1280*1024, it will look too narrow, as it will occupy only 60% of the screen width (our 700 in comparison to 1200 screen pixels width). Why does this designing way simpler? You just won't have any problems building it: no need for resolution or cross-browser optimization, as fixed pixels are read correctly under almost every browser.

The more complex way is to have width of one or several HTML tables columns on your site to be set in percents like 75% or 100% and, therefore, poses the ability to automatically broaden or narrow according to the specified percents, depending on what screen resolution the site is being viewed under.

If you have 600*800 screen settings (the screen width is 600 pixels) and one of the table width of your site is set to 100%, then this particular table along with all included text and graphic will narrow to 600 pixels, if we set the monitor to 1200*1024 resolution, i.e. having 1200 pixels wide, our site's table will stretch to the specified 100%, in that case, 1200 pixels.

That's why it looks more attractive under different resolutions but demands additional optimization, including cross-browser optimization, as Netscape Navigator browser has some problems with proper interpreting of percent settings in multi column tables. Which way to choose depends on the tasks and your preference.

I wish you endless creativity and no more then 70Kb per page

copyright (c) Pavel Lenshin

About The Author

Pavel Lenshin is an Internet entrepreneur, web-developer and marketer, founder of the entrepreneurship portal, where you can find discounted Internet services, marketing solutions, FREE ebooks, FREE reports and finally uncover innovative business strategies through FREE "NET Business Magazine".

Visit: http://asbone.com

author@asbone.com

This article was posted on January 09, 2005