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Order Atripla Online Without Prescription

My esteemed colleague Chris McEvoy apparently had 'one of his moments' (he has these Order atripla online without prescription, , you know) last Sunday evening and decided he was fed up with having to search Google for some of Google's more hidden features (oh the irony!), such as Answers, Suggest and so on. So he created Simply Google.


Simply Google


Is it simpler?


Mmm, debateable, atripla discount. The very thing that people say makes Google work is its simple interface. Purchase atripla, Wanna search. Here's the search box, people, cheap atripla. What Chris did was put all the various different Google search options on one page, making it far easier to learn what options are available, but it's not for everybody, order atripla online without prescription. Whether you like it or not, Buy atripla online, you cannot deny that he's ticked off that 'findability' box on the checklist.


The CSS makeover


Just as the Simply Google page was getting noticed by various people, Chris approached me to ask for some help in kicking it into standards mode (it was a table-based layout with non-breaking spaces and various examples of markup abuse to achieve presentational effects). Ironically, cheapest atripla, I had thought of doing just that and was going to approach him with the idea of creating a 'Simpler Simply Google'. Buy generic atripla, So, that's what I did. There are a few points I just wanted to make about the CSS make-over:



  • I didn't redesign the look and feel in any way, buy atripla without prescription. I kept to the blueprint (with just one exception - changing the location/style of the footer text)

  • Order atripla online without prescription, My aim was to rebuild without tables and make it 100% valid XHTML, strict (achieved)

  • The biggest issue I had was with the search forms not having label elements. In the original version, Atripla sale, there was a direct link to the site that the search facility related to. I could have replaced the link with a label. Instead, buy cheap atripla, I decided to use both. Atripla wi, For screen reader users, the label element provides a little more contextual information than before, but for sighted users the link will take them to the web site, atripla price. The problem would be for users who try to click on the label and expect it to give focus to the search input element, order atripla online without prescription. It does this, Atripla prescription, for a second, but then the link behaviour takes over and loads the page requested. My feeling is that if it looks like a link, atripla for sale, people will only click on it to use it as a link. Cheap atripla tablet, Is this wrong. As I said, I did this with the intention of keeping to the original design.

  • The labels for the search are after the input, atripla online cheap. Order atripla online without prescription, This is another thing that I would normally not do, hence I wanted to explain:

    • The intention was that when this page is viewed on a handheld device that does not apply the CSS (or any other browser that does not get CSS for whatever reason), the search boxes should line up nicely. If the label elements were in front of the input boxes, with no CSS they would create an unsightly ragged effect :

      labels appear after the input with CSS disabled

    • A downside of this is that the tab order is a bit strange on a fully CSS-capable browser (try it out for yourself). Should I have placed higher importance on the tab order or on the appearance of the page with no CSS.




So, that was my CSS make-over of Simply Google. I'm interested in your thoughts/feedback.


.

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Comments

Comment from Nick Harris
Time April 13, 2006 at 3:06 am

“Should I have placed higher importance on the tab order or on the appearance of the page with no CSS?”

How about using tabindexes on the text and submit inputs? Could be a little confusing for those who like to tab through everything, links and all… but there are likely more people who just tab through form elements* so it would make it easier on the majority

*disclaimer: I have absolutely no evidence to back this up ;)

Comment from Lloydi
Time April 13, 2006 at 4:36 am

I did think of that, but then I wondered if that was adding too much in to the original. I know I could do what I liked, but I wanted to re-work Chris’s original table layout to CSS without changing the view or functionality. Likewise I wondered about whether to only add tabindex for the search input elements and ignore the links, but in the end left as is. Not sure if I did the right thing.

Comment from librarianscott
Time April 13, 2006 at 7:53 am

Could you add Google’s I’m Feeling Lucky search to this?

Thanks.

Comment from Chris McEvoy
Time April 13, 2006 at 2:02 pm

I have added “Feeling Lucky” to searches and Calendar to sites.

Comment from mr. wade
Time April 17, 2006 at 7:47 am

Simply Google is great…but I didn’t notice Google’s UncleSam search option. http://www.google.com/unclesam Is it there, or are you calling it something else?

Thanks so much!

Comment from Ivan Minic
Time April 23, 2006 at 9:14 am

Brilliant job

Comment from Chris McEvoy
Time April 26, 2006 at 2:06 pm

Have you seen Simply BBC?

http://usability.typepad.com/confusability/2006/04/getting_simple_.html

Comment from Isus
Time June 21, 2006 at 5:01 pm

Hi Chris,

SIMPLY GOOGLE IS FANTASTIC. CONGRATULATIONS!! I WOULD LIKE TO PUT A LINK TO YOU IN THE SITE I AM BUILDING. CAN YOU PLEASE CHECK YOUR E-MAIL AND TELL ME WHICH LINK YOU PREFER? TO YOUR EMAIL ADDRESS OR TO USABILITY.COM.
REGARDS,

ISOLDA