Archive for the 'Books' Category

Currently Reading: Deliver First Class Websites

Monday, August 21st, 2006

I’m in the middle of reading the book Deliver First Class Websites: 101 Essential Checklists written by Shirley Kaiser and published by SitePoint Pty. Ltd. It was released in July and I was lucky enough to snag a copy at a discounted rate by being a reader of a select few of their great books to date (Build Your Own AJAX Web Applications, HTML Utopia: Designing Without Tables Using CSS, 2nd Edition & The CSS Anthology: 101 Essential Tips, Tricks & Hacks). These books are realist-based writings for “developers of today” by “developers of today” that, at times, must break out of “purist” conventions of web development. This book certainly emphasizes the use of standards (usability conventions, markup, etc), but does it with the knowledge that client needs are sometimes the final say without being damned for it.

The book mentions that it is intended for developers, designers and project managers of Websites, but it is intelligently written to be a useful tool for the client as well. The setup of the book is: topic introduction followed by checklists, checklists and more checklists with the language used being relatively basic enough for the non-technical. It also provides a ton of references for more information (the second most valuable reason for owning this book).

The author, Shirley Kaiser, is a 10 year veteran in the web design field and although her website isn’t the most spectacular from a design sense, it does hold up to her preaching in all other aspects. The book is expertly reviewed by Ian Lloyd who holds his place in the industry by being a passionate developer himself and WaSP Steering Committee member and active on the Accessibility Task Force as well. Technical Direction is handled by Kevin Yank, also the Technical Director of SitePoint, so “the goods” are in there.

I will let you know when I finish my reading and provide some more in-depth insight or just do as I say and go get this book for yourself. I have received no endorsement for this testimony.

I am still looking for the downloadble checklists though - hmmm.