In a year or two, all sites will be designed with standards that separate structure from presentation (or they will be built with Flash 7). We can watch our skills grow obsolete, or start learning standards-based techniques. In fact, since the latest versions of IE, Navigator, and Opera already support many web standards, if we are willing to let go of the notion that backward compatibility is a virtue, we can stop making excuses and start using these standards now. At ALA, beginning with Issue No. 99, we’ve done just that. Join us.
From Table Hacks to CSS Layout: A Web Designer’s Journey
Redesigning A List Apart using CSS should have been easy. It wasn’t. The first problem was understanding how CSS actually works. The second was getting it to work in standards-compliant browsers. A journey of discovery.
More from A List Apart
To Ignite a Personalization Practice, Run this Prepersonalization Workshop
Looking to tailor your UX to your individual users’ needs? Colin Eagan and Jeffrey MacIntyre have a workshop framework for you!
The Wax and the Wane of the Web
Ste Grainer takes a brief look at the history of the web, where we are now, and how we can shape its future.
Opportunities for AI in Accessibility
In this article, Aaron Gustafson muses on some of the many ways we can—and should—harness the capabilities of AI to create a more accessible world.
I am a creative.
A List Apart founder and web design OG Zeldman ponders the moments of inspiration, the hours of plodding, and the ultimate mystery at the heart of a creative career.
Humility: An Essential Value
In this excerpt from In Fulfillment: The Designer’s Journey, Justin Dauer ruminates on the past and the importance of keeping an open mind.
Personalization Pyramid: A Framework for Designing with User Data
Colin Eagan and Jeffrey MacIntyre offer a “ground-up” approach to implementing personalized digital experiences that are intentional, ethical, and technologically sound.
Mobile-First CSS: Is It Time for a Rethink?
Is mobile-first CSS always the best option? Patrick Clancey explores the pros and cons and lays out an alternative.
Designers, (Re)define Success First
Learn how to engage stakeholders, focus on impactful objectives, and measure the results in this template for ethical design.
Breaking Out of the Box
What can we do with thirty pixels? Windows Controls Overlay frees us from 40 years of history telling us how apps should look.
How to Sell UX Research with Two Simple Questions
Seriously, do not ever design screens again without first answering these questions: what are the objects and how do they relate?
A Content Model Is Not a Design System
Why do so many content models still look more like design systems rather than reflecting structured data? Mike Wills takes us on a personal journey as he examines his own past experiences and invites us to conceive content models that articulate meaning and group related content together for use on any channel.
Design for Safety, An Excerpt
In this excerpt from Design for Safety, Eva PenzeyMoog discusses concrete ways you can incorporate safety awareness into your design processes.