Talk:To Blue or Not to Blue:: Difference between revisions
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JohnCooley (talk | contribs) (Examples of professional sites using blue & underline convention) |
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Jeff | Jeff | ||
: Would you consider Google and Amazon professional web sites? If yes I'd say it's been a few seconds since visiting one. Of course Google and Amazon are not trying to invite me into a spiritual community, they have other purposes. But still I wonder if you would look at a site that did have blue & underline for hyperlinks and consider it "un-professional" thus have self fulfilling criteria for professional web sites. [[User:JohnCooley|JohnCooley]] 08:55, 11 Nov 2005 (CST) |
Latest revision as of 14:55, 11 November 2005
Well I agree that using blue text other than for links is a big no-no but I think the days when visitors expected links to be blue and underlined are well gone. If anything it's indicative that no-one has cared for the site since IE3 days - think back when did you last visit a professional looking site that had underlined blue hyperlinks? There are many other ways that hyperlinks can be made easily identifiable: the only use of a different strongly contrasting colour; using mouseovers such as the title tag so "click here for the map" appears; etc etc
Jeff
- Would you consider Google and Amazon professional web sites? If yes I'd say it's been a few seconds since visiting one. Of course Google and Amazon are not trying to invite me into a spiritual community, they have other purposes. But still I wonder if you would look at a site that did have blue & underline for hyperlinks and consider it "un-professional" thus have self fulfilling criteria for professional web sites. JohnCooley 08:55, 11 Nov 2005 (CST)