The Times Emulates Print on the Web Alabama

Microsoft and The New York Times have unveiled software that preserves the print edition's design online.

Local & National Companies

Intelligentwriting.com
(504) 812-5711
Point Clear, AL
Quest Software
(205) 995-7397
290 Star Trek Dr
Pelham, AL
Heartwood Farms
(618) 279-7208
5125 E Heartwood Rd
Waltonville, IL
Software Etc
(215) 361-3226
Montgomery Mall
North Wales, PA
Cisco Systems
(720) 875-2900
9155 E Nichols Ave Ste 400
Centennial, CO
Network Equipment Technology
(720) 963-9759
165 S Union Blvd
Lakewood, CO
Electronics Boutique
(805) 884-9976
803 Paseo Nuevo
Santa Barbara, CA
Electronics Boutique
(401) 739-4753
400 Bald Hill Rd
Warwick, RI
Watchguard Technologies
(206) 521-8340
505 5th Ave S
Seattle, WA
Computer Software Inc
(770) 248-3321
3500 Parkway Ln
Norcross, GA


The Times Emulates Print on the Web

provided by: 


The New York Times' coverage of its new online application for reading articles, called Times Reader, displayed in the application. (Courtesy of Nick Thuesen, Binary Devign.)

The Web has fostered an explosion of new ideas about information design -- the art of arranging text, graphics, and data to make reading more pleasurable or advertising more diverting. Not all of these ideas have been good ones, as anyone who has been assaulted by blinking pop-up ads knows.

But the newest feature of Microsoft's next-generation Vista operating system, due in 2007, attempts to clean up the Web, restoring some of the best principles of graphic design from the pre-Internet era. On April 28 Microsoft and The New York Times Company unveiled a prototype of the Times Reader, a browser-like program that gives New York Times designers the ability to more closely reproduce the newspaper's distinctive look and feel on a computer screen, regardless of the screen's size or format.

The software takes advantage of WinFX, a completely new system for rendering user-interface graphics that Microsoft is developing for Vista. It's distinct from the Times' recently redesigned website, but the Reader nevertheless has many of the features of a Web browser, including hyperlinks, navigation buttons, and a search function. It's also designed to stockpile content for offline reading and to make it easy to annotate, e-mail, or blog about the stories displayed.

[Click here for images from the Times Reader.]

"We are trying to make a product, a news experience, that more fully engages our readers, that allows them to want to spend more time with us," said New York Times publisher Arthur Sulzberger Jr. at last week's conference of the American Society of Newspaper Editors, where the announcement was made. "We must be platform agnostic....We must follow readers where they want to be."

The design of a newspaper is an indelible part of its identity, and while the New York Times, long known as "the Gray Lady," added color in 1997, its print edition is still distinguished by a somber, restrained design and dignified serif typeface for text (Imperial), which are perhaps the most recognizable in the newspaper industry. And the Times' website has sought to mimic that flavor, most recently with a redesign that uses serif fonts, and which is intended to take advantage of larger computer monitors. But with the advent of the Times Reader, the paper's online version will bear a much greater resemblance to its print product.

And, indeed, print designers argue that the old-fashioned print newspaper boasts one of our culture's most elegant and highly evolved user interfaces. A newspaper's narrow columns, for example, make it easy to scan an entire story. Text is usually placed on a consistent "grid" that guides the eye horizontally and vertically. And varying type sizes, along with the placement of stories, headlines, and graphics, convey each story's relative importance.

The Times Reader recreates those aids to understanding using Microsoft's new Windows Presentation Foundation (WPF) and other WinFX tools intended to make Vista visually richer than Windows XP. One of WPF's key features is the ability to make documents "reflow" and auto-hyphenate, so that multi-column formats are retained even when a user resizes the Reader window. "Basically, designers from the print world are able to regain the control over their content they lost when content started to gravitate to the Web," writes Nick Thuesen, a Microsoft programmer who publishes a personal blog about his work on WPF.

By Wade Roush

Read article at techreview.com

Featured Local Company

Intelligentwriting.com

(504) 812-5711
Point Clear, AL
http://www.intelligentwriting.com

Regional Articles
- The Times Emulates Print on the Web Alabaster AL
- The Times Emulates Print on the Web Albertville AL
- The Times Emulates Print on the Web Alexander City AL
- The Times Emulates Print on the Web Andalusia AL
- The Times Emulates Print on the Web Anniston AL
- The Times Emulates Print on the Web Arab AL
- The Times Emulates Print on the Web Athens AL
- The Times Emulates Print on the Web Atmore AL
- The Times Emulates Print on the Web Auburn AL
- The Times Emulates Print on the Web Bay Minette AL
- The Times Emulates Print on the Web Bessemer AL
- The Times Emulates Print on the Web Birmingham AL
- The Times Emulates Print on the Web Boaz AL
- The Times Emulates Print on the Web Brewton AL
- The Times Emulates Print on the Web Clanton AL
- The Times Emulates Print on the Web Cullman AL
- The Times Emulates Print on the Web Daphne AL
- The Times Emulates Print on the Web Decatur AL
- The Times Emulates Print on the Web Dothan AL
- The Times Emulates Print on the Web Enterprise AL
- The Times Emulates Print on the Web Eufaula AL
- The Times Emulates Print on the Web Fairhope AL
- The Times Emulates Print on the Web Florence AL
- The Times Emulates Print on the Web Foley AL
- The Times Emulates Print on the Web Fort Payne AL
- The Times Emulates Print on the Web Gadsden AL
- The Times Emulates Print on the Web Guntersville AL
- The Times Emulates Print on the Web Haleyville AL
- The Times Emulates Print on the Web Hartselle AL
- The Times Emulates Print on the Web Huntsville AL
- The Times Emulates Print on the Web Jasper AL
- The Times Emulates Print on the Web Madison AL
- The Times Emulates Print on the Web Mobile AL
- The Times Emulates Print on the Web Montevallo AL
- The Times Emulates Print on the Web Montgomery AL
- The Times Emulates Print on the Web Muscle Shoals AL
- The Times Emulates Print on the Web Northport AL
- The Times Emulates Print on the Web Opelika AL
- The Times Emulates Print on the Web Pelham AL
- The Times Emulates Print on the Web Pell City AL
- The Times Emulates Print on the Web Phenix City AL
- The Times Emulates Print on the Web Pinson AL
- The Times Emulates Print on the Web Prattville AL
- The Times Emulates Print on the Web Scottsboro AL
- The Times Emulates Print on the Web Selma AL
- The Times Emulates Print on the Web Semmes AL
- The Times Emulates Print on the Web Sylacauga AL
- The Times Emulates Print on the Web Talladega AL
- The Times Emulates Print on the Web Theodore AL
- The Times Emulates Print on the Web Trussville AL
- The Times Emulates Print on the Web Tuscaloosa AL
- The Times Emulates Print on the Web Tuscumbia AL
- The Times Emulates Print on the Web Valley AL
- The Times Emulates Print on the Web Wetumpka AL
Related Local Events
Media Buying Academy's "BootCamp"-Complete Media Buying Training Program
Dates: 9/15/2008 - 9/18/2008
Location: TBD
Birmingham AL
View Details

Winning with African American Consumers
Dates: 10/17/2008 - 10/17/2008
Location: Energen Plaza
Birmingham AL
View Details

The IN in Birmingham
Dates: 6/20/2008 - 6/20/2008
Location: Energen Plaza
Birmingham AL
View Details

Birmingham AMA Monthly Luncheon
Dates: 6/18/2008 - 6/18/2008
Location: Vulcan Park and Museum
Birmingham AL
View Details
Rate Article
     
Articles Insider

Rss   Delicious   Digg   Add To My Yahoo   Add To My Google   Bookmark   Search Plugin

Topics:
Advertising Engineering Industrial Goods & Services Software
Business Services Family Insurance Technology
Career Financial Services Internet Telecommunications
Cars Food & Beverage Legal Transportation & Logistics
Computer Hardware Health Real Estate Travel
Construction Home Services Retail & Consumer Services Wedding
Education