Posted 05.27.11 | Filed under: Content Management, Content Strategy, Industry Shift, Interaction Design & UX, Platforms & Channels, Technical Architecture
Reframing Content of the Undesigned Web
This wave has two faces. One is the trend towards more minimal, readable designs. The other is the imperative to make content as easily reformattable as possible, separating content from the designs in which it’s initially clothed.
You can see it at work in tools like Instapaper and Readability. You can see it in applications like Flipboard, which filter and reformat news through the lens of your social network. And you can see it in news readers like Google News, which present every website’s latest articles in a consistent, quickly-scannable and easily searchable format.
In fact, it’s possible not just for publishers, but for readers and viewers to recast the message into new media, stripping it of its former context and reformatting, republishing, and reframing it at will.
via The Undesigned Web – Dylan Tweney – Technology – The Atlantic.
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