I agree with Siri. I've been doing web development for years and I use / recommend the "Zeldman Philosophy" and use the website alistapart.com. If you do ANY webdesign, buy this book now! http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0735712018/ref=nosim/002-2081165-0690406?n=283155 In essence: It's all about using web standards for your website. Some links to help: http://www.alistapart.com/comments/flexiblelayouts/?page=7 http://www.zeldman.com/dwws/ My 2 cents -Scott Siri Amrit Kaur wrote: > On Monday 06 February 2006 12:46 am, Joseph Huber kindly wrote: > >>Dunno if I am going to open a can of worms here... anyone out there that >>has done some web page design (free-lance, during the day job, whatever) >>have any thoughts on a screen resolution to aim for? I am thinking that 15 >>inch monitors and 800x600 is pretty much a thing of the past (and that 17 >>inch is fast going the same way) but that 1024x768 is reasonable >>resolution. I have a 17 inch monitor at home and usually have the browser >>maximized... but at work on a 19 inch (to me) having a window maximized >>seems to make it too big. >> >>I have a hard time arguing with the "design research" behind something like >>good old Amazon which seems to design for 1024x768 but scales well down to >>800x600 (but then me, myself and I don't have Amazon type resources). What >>looks good assuming 1024x768 doesn't work so much at 800x600 (unless I >>force a fixed size font which I don't want to do... and Firefox seems to >>ignore it if I do anyway) and if I make it look good at 800x600 it doesn't >>look so hot at 1024x768. >> >>I'm getting stuck in a rut where all I'm going to do is worry about >>resolution for the indeterminate future. Any thoughts welcome... >> >>Joe >> >> > > Use a fluid CSS layout that will expand and contract according to the viewers' > needs. Go for web standards so that your pages will render correctly in most > browsers. Avoid fixed-fonts; let people make their fonts bigger or smaller as > they like. Don't make your pictures too big at the higher resolution, or > they'll be enormous at 800x600 and may break the layout . > > My site (see sig) is pretty nice at 1024x768 and 800x600. I've never seen it > on a 19" monitor, so I don't know how it is on that. The fonts are pretty big > at 800x600, but believe it or not, a lot of people have bad eyesight and like > larger fonts. The majority of monitors in use are set for 1024x768, and the > second highest users are using 800x600. That may vary depending on your > market. Maybe you're selling something to people who like the latest and > greatest in hardware, and more of them will have bigger monitors. > > There are lots of free CSS templates available on the web that you can > experiment with. I started with one that had the features I wanted and played > around with the fonts and colors, then I sent it to a graphic artist who, for > very little money, tweaked it to make it prettier. There are also tools you > can use to see how your pages look in different browsers. > > HTH, > > Siri Amrit --------------------------------------------------- PLUG-discuss mailing list - PLUG-discuss@lists.plug.phoenix.az.us To subscribe, unsubscribe, or to change you mail settings: http://lists.PLUG.phoenix.az.us/mailman/listinfo/plug-discuss