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  #1   Report Post  
Unisaw A100
 
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Default The Best Woodworking Web Site?

OK, I know, there's more than one. The trouble is anyone
who owns the software and has an uncle that needs a Web page
is building Web sites, calling themselves Web site builders
and probably 99% of the sites suck and that includes most
nearly all the Web sites, like say 99%. I mean, these same
guys/gurls would have bought a typewriter (pre-Al Gore's
World Wide Web) and thought themselves to be the next
(insert name of great writer here/I say Hemingway)(1).

Right?

(Rant Off)

So, without further ado, I nominate Pat Warner's site as
"The Best Woodworking Web Site".

http://www.patwarner.com

Your Mileage May Vary.

Feel free to nominate your own.

Just say no to banner ads, bad design, mouse droppings,
blinkies and (insert other annoyances Web site designers
have at their disposal here).

(1) What I am most thankful for is these same people have
no foot hold into other areas of design like cars (imagine
the crap they'd come up with), clothing, print media,
housing and so on.

Yeah I know, I went (Rant Off) above. Just can't help
myself when it comes to trashing Web page designers/you
can't trash them enough. The World Wide Web is the double
wide trailer of design. I mean, the damn thing oughtta be
regulated.

UA100
  #2   Report Post  
LRod
 
Posts: n/a
Default

On Sat, 05 Mar 2005 12:24:52 GMT, Unisaw A100
wrote:

OK, I know, there's more than one. The trouble is anyone
who owns the software and has an uncle that needs a Web page
is building Web sites, calling themselves Web site builders
and probably 99% of the sites suck and that includes most
nearly all the Web sites, like say 99%. I mean, these same
guys/gurls would have bought a typewriter (pre-Al Gore's
World Wide Web) and thought themselves to be the next
(insert name of great writer here/I say Hemingway)(1).

Right?

(Rant Off)



Just say no to banner ads, bad design, mouse droppings,
blinkies and (insert other annoyances Web site designers
have at their disposal here).

(1) What I am most thankful for is these same people have
no foot hold into other areas of design like cars (imagine
the crap they'd come up with), clothing, print media,
housing and so on.

Yeah I know, I went (Rant Off) above. Just can't help
myself when it comes to trashing Web page designers/you
can't trash them enough. The World Wide Web is the double
wide trailer of design. I mean, the damn thing oughtta be
regulated.


Gulp. Now I'm shaking in my boots. Especially since you just recently
mentioned mine. I thought I'd worked out most of the web-design-no-nos
on my page. I know I don't have banner ads or blinkies. I don't know
if I have mouse droppings or bad design.

Of course the problem is, no one ever sends you email telling you your
site sucks. And what if the gush email you do get is just someone
trying to be double-wide polite? What do you learn from that?


- -
LRod

Master Woodbutcher and seasoned termite

Shamelessly whoring my website since 1999

http://www.woodbutcher.net
  #3   Report Post  
 
Posts: n/a
Default

Ok, your site does not suck. However, its not a website. Its a BLOG.

Bob

  #6   Report Post  
J T
 
Posts: n/a
Default

Sat, Mar 5, 2005, 3:15pm (EST+5)
(Allyn=A0Vaughn) posted:
http://www.blogger.com/start

The link says:
A blog is your easy-to-use web site, where you can quickly post
thoughts, interact with people, and more.

Ah, I was afraid for a bit that my web page was a blog. No fear it
isn't. I definitely don't interact with people there. LMAO



JOAT
Intellectual brilliance is no guarantee against being dead wrong.
- David Fasold

  #8   Report Post  
Unisaw A100
 
Posts: n/a
Default

LRod wrote:
Gulp. Now I'm shaking in my boots. Especially since you just recently
mentioned mine. I thought I'd worked out most of the web-design-no-nos
on my page. I know I don't have banner ads or blinkies. I don't know
if I have mouse droppings or bad design.


I'm more looking at the "professional" sites. Pat sells
from his. You don't. In other words, we turn a blind eye
to ho-mades.

Of course the problem is, no one ever sends you email telling you your
site sucks. And what if the gush email you do get is just someone
trying to be double-wide polite? What do you learn from that?


I appreciate complements. I learn from criticism.

UA100
  #10   Report Post  
Bob Schmall
 
Posts: n/a
Default


"Unisaw A100" wrote in message
...
OK, I know, there's more than one. The trouble is anyone
who owns the software and has an uncle that needs a Web page
is building Web sites, calling themselves Web site builders
and probably 99% of the sites suck and that includes most
nearly all the Web sites, like say 99%.


(snip)
Yeah I know, I went (Rant Off) above. Just can't help
myself when it comes to trashing Web page designers/you
can't trash them enough. The World Wide Web is the double
wide trailer of design. I mean, the damn thing oughtta be
regulated.

UA100


Yeah, and how come

....GM can't design interiors?
....women over 200 pounds wear sweats?
....Howard Stern is allowed to appear in public?
....we all can't just get along?

I'm thinking it has something to do with our humanity, but what do I know?

Bob




  #11   Report Post  
Patriarch
 
Posts: n/a
Default

Unisaw A100 wrote in
:

OK, I know, there's more than one. snip

So, without further ado, I nominate Pat Warner's site as
"The Best Woodworking Web Site".

http://www.patwarner.com

Your Mileage May Vary.

Feel free to nominate your own.


Yes, Pat's is good. I've learned much there, and bought a little.

Maybe not in the vein that you intended, but as an all- around,
excellent wReck supplement/supplant, I offer the group effort

www.woodcentral.com

Thank you Mssrs. Walentine, et al...

In the category of "the design is dated, but not compared to the
content":

www.supertool.com

Thank you again, Mr. Leach.

And an honorable mention, and word of gratitude, is certainly due Jeff
Gorman, from the side of the pond which spells funny...

Patriarch,
who rather likes these 'on-topic trolls'...




  #12   Report Post  
Luigi Zanasi
 
Posts: n/a
Default

On Sat, 05 Mar 2005 10:16:07 -0600, Patriarch wrote:

Unisaw A100 wrote in
:

OK, I know, there's more than one. snip

So, without further ado, I nominate Pat Warner's site as
"The Best Woodworking Web Site".

http://www.patwarner.com

Your Mileage May Vary.

Feel free to nominate your own.


Yes, Pat's is good. I've learned much there, and bought a little.


Agreed. Same here. But,
snip

And an honorable mention, and word of gratitude, is certainly due Jeff
Gorman, from the side of the pond which spells funny...


I think more than an honourable mention. It is my favourite. Simple, clean
and a wealth of useful info.

http://www.amgron.clara.net/

Patriarch,
who rather likes these 'on-topic trolls'...


--
Luigi
Replace "nonet" with "yukonomics" for real email
www.yukonomics.ca/wooddorking/humour.html
www.yukonomics.ca/wooddorking/antifaq.html

  #13   Report Post  
Rick Cook
 
Posts: n/a
Default

Unisaw A100 wrote:
OK, I know, there's more than one. The trouble is anyone
who owns the software and has an uncle that needs a Web page
is building Web sites, calling themselves Web site builders
and probably 99% of the sites suck and that includes most
nearly all the Web sites, like say 99%. I mean, these same
guys/gurls would have bought a typewriter (pre-Al Gore's
World Wide Web) and thought themselves to be the next
(insert name of great writer here/I say Hemingway)(1).

Right?

(Rant Off)

So, without further ado, I nominate Pat Warner's site as
"The Best Woodworking Web Site".

http://www.patwarner.com

Your Mileage May Vary.

Feel free to nominate your own.

Just say no to banner ads, bad design, mouse droppings,
blinkies and (insert other annoyances Web site designers
have at their disposal here).

(1) What I am most thankful for is these same people have
no foot hold into other areas of design like cars (imagine
the crap they'd come up with), clothing, print media,
housing and so on.

Yeah I know, I went (Rant Off) above. Just can't help
myself when it comes to trashing Web page designers/you
can't trash them enough. The World Wide Web is the double
wide trailer of design. I mean, the damn thing oughtta be
regulated.

UA100


Welcome to the wonderful world of freedom.
We see the same thing happen every time a new generation of tools comes
along that makes what used to be the province of highly trained
professionals available to anyone.

We saw it in the 60s when cheap, easy, offset printing was taken up by
the counter-culture and the result was things like the underground
newspaper.

We saw it in the 80s when desktop publishing and laser printers came along.

And we saw it starting in the 1990s with web design. (Or lack thereof.)

The fact is that when you put powerful tools in most people's hands
you're going to get crap -- most of the time. I'm sure old-time cabinet
makers felt the same way when inexpensive power tools made hobby
woodworking popular.

But on the whole it is a very good thing. In all cases we get an
enormous outpouring of crap that by and large settles down into a lot of
solid, pedestrian work and a whole new generation of really brilliant
stuff from a small minority.

I've been particularly struck by this in web design because I've only
recently started working with it again after being away for about five
years. Five years ago, when HTML 3.2 was new and Netscape and Internet
Explorer were duking it out, web design was an unholy mess. It was
dominated by refugee graphic designers who insisted that every element
appear just exactly _so_ and would do anything to make that happen.
One-pixel gifs, non-breaking spaces and all kinds of browser-specific
tricks were the norm and people got very upset if you suggested that you
actually respect the medium you were designing in.

Today there's still a lot of ugly crap out there and, of course, a lot
of juvenilia like blinking images, but things are a lot better. The
dominant school of web design understands the medium better and is
dedicated to working with it rather than fighting it.

Meanwhile these new technologies enable us to share information better
and more freely. Remember 'freedom of the press belong to he who owns
one?'. Not nearly as true any more. Or just consider this NG.

Now if we could just convince these people that content and not cream
sauce is important. But that's the topic for another rant.

--RC
  #14   Report Post  
Nicholas
 
Posts: n/a
Default

Blatent promo...

http://www.nbjoinery.net

New UK one man joinery business...

maybe not the best but it's hosted on an ITX computer cased in an Ash Box
!!!

NMB


"Rick Cook" wrote in message
nk.net...
Unisaw A100 wrote:
OK, I know, there's more than one. The trouble is anyone
who owns the software and has an uncle that needs a Web page
is building Web sites, calling themselves Web site builders
and probably 99% of the sites suck and that includes most
nearly all the Web sites, like say 99%. I mean, these same
guys/gurls would have bought a typewriter (pre-Al Gore's
World Wide Web) and thought themselves to be the next
(insert name of great writer here/I say Hemingway)(1).

Right?

(Rant Off)

So, without further ado, I nominate Pat Warner's site as
"The Best Woodworking Web Site".

http://www.patwarner.com

Your Mileage May Vary.

Feel free to nominate your own.

Just say no to banner ads, bad design, mouse droppings,
blinkies and (insert other annoyances Web site designers
have at their disposal here).

(1) What I am most thankful for is these same people have
no foot hold into other areas of design like cars (imagine
the crap they'd come up with), clothing, print media,
housing and so on.

Yeah I know, I went (Rant Off) above. Just can't help
myself when it comes to trashing Web page designers/you
can't trash them enough. The World Wide Web is the double
wide trailer of design. I mean, the damn thing oughtta be
regulated.

UA100


Welcome to the wonderful world of freedom.
We see the same thing happen every time a new generation of tools comes
along that makes what used to be the province of highly trained
professionals available to anyone.

We saw it in the 60s when cheap, easy, offset printing was taken up by the
counter-culture and the result was things like the underground newspaper.

We saw it in the 80s when desktop publishing and laser printers came
along.

And we saw it starting in the 1990s with web design. (Or lack thereof.)

The fact is that when you put powerful tools in most people's hands you're
going to get crap -- most of the time. I'm sure old-time cabinet makers
felt the same way when inexpensive power tools made hobby woodworking
popular.

But on the whole it is a very good thing. In all cases we get an enormous
outpouring of crap that by and large settles down into a lot of solid,
pedestrian work and a whole new generation of really brilliant stuff from
a small minority.

I've been particularly struck by this in web design because I've only
recently started working with it again after being away for about five
years. Five years ago, when HTML 3.2 was new and Netscape and Internet
Explorer were duking it out, web design was an unholy mess. It was
dominated by refugee graphic designers who insisted that every element
appear just exactly _so_ and would do anything to make that happen.
One-pixel gifs, non-breaking spaces and all kinds of browser-specific
tricks were the norm and people got very upset if you suggested that you
actually respect the medium you were designing in.

Today there's still a lot of ugly crap out there and, of course, a lot of
juvenilia like blinking images, but things are a lot better. The dominant
school of web design understands the medium better and is dedicated to
working with it rather than fighting it.

Meanwhile these new technologies enable us to share information better and
more freely. Remember 'freedom of the press belong to he who owns one?'.
Not nearly as true any more. Or just consider this NG.

Now if we could just convince these people that content and not cream
sauce is important. But that's the topic for another rant.

--RC



  #15   Report Post  
Unisaw A100
 
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Rick Cook wrote:
Now if we could just convince these people that content and not cream
sauce is important. But that's the topic for another rant.



Agreed that we should convince people but I disagree that
it's for another rant.

UA100


  #16   Report Post  
Tony Mo
 
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http://www.inthewoodshop.org

This was the one that got me started in woodworking about 3 years ago. I
think Howard does a good job of keeping it up to date.

TonyMo
Ontario


  #17   Report Post  
Ed Clarke
 
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On 2005-03-05, Unisaw A100 wrote:

http://www.codesmiths.com/shed/workshop

I bought all the books that Andy mentioned under the Craftsman
style section. Cost me a hundred bucks... Worth it though.

He has a nice section on fuming white oak. I'll be doing that
next week, or perhaps the week after.

--
I can find no modern furniture that is as well designed and emotionally
satisfying as that made by the Arts and Crafts movement in the early years
of the last century.
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