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Greg Wallis

 

Google Sites add Nav Bar Dropdowns

Quietly and unannounced Google has added a much needed feature to its horizontal navbar element from within Google Sites: Horizontal navigation drop-down menus. Quite why these weren't included in the initial roll-out of the horizontal menu earlier this year isn't clear, but this new feature is much welcome and very needed by anyone that has more than a handful of pages to their site.

Somewhat rudimentary, it nonetheless adds an extra dimension to site navigation and bolsters the argument for the use of Google Sites, particularly in a corporate environment. Background colour and text colour of the dropdown menus are changeable so that they'll fit the site's colour scheme but there are a couple of issues that should have been addressed.

(download)

Firstly, the background colour is just one solid block of colour (albeit with a 1 pixel white border around the whole submenu, which is helpful to visually separate it from underlying content) but with no border per item that would have allowed greater visual clarity and a more polished look. Secondly, the hover colour can't be set and is inherited from the main horizontal menu, which is fine except that if you wished the dropdown to have a complimentary colour scheme (say a black background with white text, if the main menu had a white background with black text) then the menu item, when moused over, will then disappear from view — which means, in reality, that the colours of the dropdown have to be similar to those of the main menu. Not a huge drawback but one that could easily have been rectified with a little thought beforehand. 

However, it's very nice to see that there is a small time delay when the mouse moves away from the dropdown menu. Probably only 300 milliseconds, but it makes the submenu very user-friendly. A nice touch, even though it's not programmable. So the good news is that a much needed feature has been added and one that is simple and quick to implement, and I shall be using it right away with client sites.

But... this is Google and not some backstreet developer working in his spare time, so resources should not be a problem, and it beggars belief that progress is so slow and clunky. It's also worth noting that a couple of weeks ago a very strange thing happened to the horizontal menu in Google Sites; the "Horizontal navigation selected text colour" option simply stopped working. Not just on my sites but across the whole of Google Sites. Google staff wrote on a help forum that a bug had occurred but plainly this was because they were introducing the new dropdown menu feature (which necessitated new code) and were covertly beta testing across the whole of the Sites' system. Why would any professional IT team do that? It does seem that the team that works on Google Sites is either not full-time or they have no one to really answer to, as the potential of this feature of Google Apps is enormous but is almost overlooked by Google itself, and is certainly looked down upon by web professionals who just aren't aware of what's on offer.

With better IT management, better marketing, and a more mature product, Google Sites could take on the corporate web sector and make a massive gain on the competition. Why isn't this the case? I don't know either.

 

Filed under  //   Google   Google Apps   Google sites   Greg Wallis   dropdown   horizontal navbar   menu   navbar  

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Podcast — Why Use Posterous?

A new audio podcast, 3 1/2 minutes long, and a simple take on the many advantages of using Posterous to blog.

(download)

Filed under  //   Greg Wallis   Posterous   audio   blogging   mp3   podcast  

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#TwitterTimes is actually rather good

I've been playing with the Twitter Times, an online news aggregator that tailors content specifically for Twitter users, and what it does is it looks deep into your Twitter followers and those you follow, checks out links etc. and then over a period of a day or two creates a continuously updated edition just for you. Very cool, and works rather well. Do check this out if the idea of focussed and relevant content is something you fancy.

My edition is here, you set your own one up in seconds:

http://twittertim.es/gregwallis

Filed under  //   Greg Wallis   Twitter   Twitter Times   news   news feed   social media  

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Warning: Do not take this picture

Today's main story in The Independent highlights the appalling behaviour of police forces throughout the UK regarding the over-zealous and deliberate misuse of Section 44 of the Terrorist Act whereby the police can search and detain anybody without a required reason to do so. This grey and bizarre legal instrument has been directed at photographers, amateur and professional alike, for taking innocent photographs of everyday subjects.

Our civil liberties are being eroded in a deliberate and Machiavellian way to grant insidious authoritarian powers to limit our democratic rights. If we don't stand up, speak up, and put a fight up, then the process will be irreversible and we'll have succumbed, by stealth, to what is effectively the seeds of neo-fascism (and yes, I'm serious).

http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/home-news/warning-do-not-take-this-picture-1833127.html

And if you are interested in maintaining your rights and fighting back using the power of peaceful protest, then also check out this new group who I wish much success and who facilitate a dialogue between the public and the police.

http://www.mypolice.org/

 

Filed under  //   Civil Liberties   Greg Wallis   Section 44   Terrorism   Terrorist Act   The Independent   freedom   news   photographer   photography   police  

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How #OldMedia needs to fight back

Here's a great example of how Old Media needs to fight back and push the case for the simplicity, tactile delight, and practicality of physical media against the unnecessary complication of trying to replicate it in a digital environment. Digital's cool, sure, but physical (analogue) media such as newspapers, books, and magazines need to be embraced and supported to ensure their very survival and to avoid a fast approaching journalistic Armageddon.

Note to Rupert Murdoch: Stop this protectionist arrogance, and realize that charging for online content will never work, it will simply alienate people who will then neither visit your news websites nor buy your newspapers — they'll migrate elsewhere (and the Guardian Online is a likely destination in the UK). Simply make your newspapers better value, cheaper, and offer unique content, that will then be reason enough for ordinary people to buy a "daily" on a regular basis. It used to work; it still can. And yes, I know the above video is from News International, and I applaud them for it.

 

Filed under  //   Greg Wallis   Guardian   New Media   News International   Old Media   Rupert Murdoch   UK   analogue   digital   newspaper  

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