History for Apr02Results
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Results of Information Architecture IRC chat
At noon eastern on April 2, Olivier Deckmyn, Lennart Regebro, and
Paul Everitt got together for an IRC chat regarding newzopeorg's
design and information architecture. The Apr02ChatLog is available. This
document summarizes the decisions made during the chat.
Page Structure
There are types of pages on new.zope.org (nza):
a. Home page. This is the top-most page and might have extra
layout.
b. Subpage. This describes the layout of common elements for all
pages on the site under the home page.
All pages on the site will have the following common elements:
a. Logo (in the top left).
b. Navbar, aka top menu (top of page, going horizontally).
c. Breadcrumbs (location in the site with backlinks, most likely
under logo).
d. User menu (user-centric actions, most likely on same line as
breadcrumbs, right justified).
e. Side menu (vertically on left).
f. Content area (text of the current document, news item, etc.)
f. Footer (privacy statement, copyright, etc.)
Some users do not want the side menu on all pages. We might need to
provide a facility to allow people to turn the sidemenu off. All in
all, though, we are going with a very common layout that will allow
people to leverage the scanning skills they have acquired from other
sites.
The side menu will actually be broken into two parts: links common
to all pages and context-specific links. That is, the side menu is
broken into the global side menu and the section menu. The entire
side menu will be open on the home page. On subpages, most of the
sidemenu will be closed, with the current section expanded.
As discussed below, the side menu is also related to the concept of
sections.
The navmenu (or top menu) will contain the basic links that everyone
has learned to expect on most large sites::
home | site map | search [______] (go) | help | print
The home page will have prominent entry points of links organized by
audience type: user, developer, webmaster, and business person.
This organization by audience will essentially group sections and
subsections that are relevant to particular kinds of readers.
Also, links that are very important but one-time use (such as Guided
Tour) will be featured prominently on the home page, but not
repeated on the side menu.
We discussed the <a
href="http://www.nidecker.net/zope.org/mockups/">layouts that were
voted on</a> and chose the top two (4.1 and 6.2) as the ones to go
forward with. We will be doing the following:
a. Convert the mockups to HTML.
b. Integrate the first-round cut at IA.
c. Post results for discussion.
Sections
Sections are a key organizing unit for the site. Each section is
focused on a topic or related set of material. Again, this is a
common idea that people have learned to use in other sites and CMS
systems. Key features of sections:
a. A section has a section owner(s) that is responsible for
gardening, adding value, and generally managing the content.
b. A section is a permanent part of the site's organization.
c. Because of (b), a section is not in memberspace.
d. A section has a section menu in the side menu.
e. The top page for a section is similar to a home page. It might
have a section news bar, some different layout, etc.
Sections are also the first level entries in the site map.
Information Architecture
The structure of the site and navigation elements on the pages were
previously discussed in a <a
href="http://lists.zope.org/pipermail/zope-web/2002-March/001067.html">email
by Lennart</a>. This sparked some more discussion on the zope-web
mailing list. We made decisions about this structure.
There are three basic axes of site navigation:
a. Navbar, containing generic site navigation features.
b. Sections.
c. Audience type, which is really a relabelling of material in the
sections.
Below is a sample layout of the section structure::
News
Opens the news page. A shorter version will also appear in a
box in the content area of the home page.
About Zope
What is Zope?
Awards
Getting Started
Report bugs
About Zope.org
Documentation
References
API, DTML, Quick Ref
The Zope Book
Zope Developer Guide
Zope Administrator Guide
Articles
How-To's
Books in print
Download
Zope
Featured products
Products by category
All products
Projects
Zope 3
Community
Mailing lists
Zope-powered sites
Zope User Groups
IRC
The by-audience organization::
User
What is Zope?
Guided Tour
Getting Started
Mailing Lists
[email protected]
[email protected]
Developer
Developers Documentation
Zope Developers Guide
Links to relevant parts of Zope Book
Getting Started
Links to BoringProduct and other stuff
Mailing Lists
Webmaster
Documentation
Zope Administrators Guide
Links to relevant parts of Zope Book
Mailing Lists
[email protected]
[email protected]
[email protected]
[email protected]
[email protected]
[email protected]
Reporting Bugs
Business (Maybe just links to zope.com?)
What is Zope?
Zope Corporation
Zope Solution Providers
Zope Marketing
Hosting
Case Studies
Awards
Sites
Media Coverage