On Mon, 24 Nov 2008, Scott Ritchie wrote: [...]
Can be improved with minor tweaks:
- The news should be clickable, and take you to a separate news page
with slightly longer stories.
Agreed. We should have a separate news page. It could probably work as the news archive page directly: just show the most recent 10 news items with a link at the bottom to get the next 10, etc.
In the sidebox 'News' should link to that page. To save space, we could omit the year, after all nowadays the news items are frequent enough that the year is not ambiguous.
So November 7, 2008: Wine 1.1.8 Released
would become November 7: Wine 1.1.8 Released
And we could remove the following sentence altogether as it does not add anything to the new title:
The Wine development release 1.1.8 is now available.
- Rather than getting smaller when you hover the mouse over the buttons,
it should be the other way around - highlight them and they get bigger
Agreed too. I guess the idea it to make it look like the button has been pressed but I don't like it. It would be nicer if a kind of neon ring lit up around it (like in some elevators).
[...]
- I would replace it with a very small boilerplate text that says what
Wine does, namely "Wine lets you run Windows applications in Linux and on the Mac".
We don't want to be Linux-centric however (it's hard enough as it is to convince FreeBSD users we don't hate them). So maybe replace Linux with Unix, or add in FreeBSD, or simply BSD into it. And I think we can drop the beginning of the sentence since it will appear as follows:
WINE hq Runs Windows applications on Linux, BSD and Mac OS X.
(I'd even be tempted to bold 'applications' for newbies...)
- The "Help!" button could be a bit friendlier, eg "Get Help" or
"Support". At the least, drop the exclamation point.
Well, 'Help!' has a nice Beatles ring to it, while 'Get Help' sounds very much like 'Go see a Shrink' and 'Support' like we're going to put them in touch with an 'Alcoholics Anonymous' group. <g>
More seriously, the problem with using single words is that it makes it harder to keep consistent about using the active or passive form. So we have: * 'Information' and 'Development' on the passive side. * 'Download' and 'Donate' on the active side. * 'Help!' on one side or the other, depending on how you understand it.
Notice how OpenOffice.org avoids this issue by using proper sentences.
[...]
- The download icon is weird. A large down arrow would probably be
better than a CD, especially since we don't offer anything CD-like.
- Similarly, using the classic "wrench" icon for development would be a
bit more obvious.
Sounds good too.
I'm not a big fan of the high contrast in the colors. The OpenOffice.org site is much softer in that respect. But then colors...
I also find the glass on the main page to be huge (as in too big). I don't know if it is related, but on my laptop (1024x768) there is no background to the right of the sidebar. There is ample blank space next to the main buttons though. So there's some work needed so the site can adapt to lower window widths. It should be able to cope down to about 820 pixels as far as I can see here.