Creative Content for the Web (Book)
To understand creative content for the web, this book examines how the medium differs from other media. It traces the brief but meteroic history of the World Wide Web, looks at the technologies that drive it and how they impact on content, gives consideration to the electronic reader, and considers how the medium impacts on the message.
By gaining an understanding of how it is unique as a publishing medium, this book empowers anyone-writers, authors-academics, content providers or individuals-to create effective, attractive and compelling content for the World Wide Web. More than this, by explaining in clear, jargon-free lanauge, it shows the reader how to take direct advantage of the opportunities offered by this uniquely powerful electronic medium.
The book directs the reader who wishes to:
- gain an understanding of how interactive content on the web works
- use the web as an open forum for new writing
- write for electronic publishers, commercial and corporate clients
- post academic articles
- self-promte
- self-publish on the World Wide Web
Part One is theoretical and looks at the backgrund of this remarkable publishing phenomenon. Issues covered include consideration of the web interface, the theory of hyperlinked non-linear documents, metaphors and the web, the economics of web publishing, new media and the impact on old, creativity and technology, 'net culture', and the electronic reader. Part Two is practical and covers creating and structuring hypertext, writing for the web, the rhetoric of the web, editing and maintenance, creating virtual communities, the basics of design, HTML vs. PDF. The final chapter looks at some of the underlying issues that relate to content: privacy, plagiarism, freedom of speech versus the need to control content, the ethics and mroality of web publishing.
Edition
Introduction 3
PART ONE CONTENT AND THE WORLD WIDE WEB
Chapter One The Birth of a New Medium 12
Chapter Two Content on the Web 21
Chapter Three Putting the Best Interface Forward 41
Chapter Four The Medium, the Message and Content 55
Chapter Five The Electronic Reader 75
PART TWO CREATING CONTENT ON THE WORLD WIDE WEB
Chapter Six Hypertext 88
Chapter Seven Writing for the Web 103
Chapter Eight Virtual Communities 125
Chapter Nine Design, Style and Content 141
Chapter Ten Content Creation, Responsibilities and the Reader 161
Further Reading 179
Index 185