Browser differences

When coding a website I try to adhere to the standards created by the internet standards body at W3C.org as closely as possible. These are the same standards browser makers should to adhere to in order to guarantee a similar result when visiting a website in different browsers.

All my websites are tested in Firefox 1.5, Firefox 2, Firefox 3.x, Opera 9, Opera 10, Safari 3, Safari 4, Internet Explorer 8, Internet Explorer 7, Internet Explorer 6.

My templates will be usable with and without javascript. I think that is important because there is a certain percentage of people who choose not to use javascript. However, the design and (off course) the functionality will be different from the design people get when using a javascript.

Apart from that, there might be minor differences in the way the website looks and functions in the various browsers, especially in Internet Explorer 6. Internet Explorer 6 is an old browser that does not adhere to the standard way of creating a website. But it is still used by certain percentage of users (mostly in big corporations that still use Windows XP). To make a website function in Internet Explorer 6 the design needs to be adjusted - which in praxis means I have disable certain features. Usually I use the non-javascript design for Internet Explorer 6.

In theory my websites should be xhtml 1.1 ad CSS 2 compliant (W3C), but in order to make a website function in all browsers I might sometimes choose to ignore that standard in order to get a better result.

Services for Designers

With Services for Designers I support designers who are less experienced in working for the web, and I offer support for those designers who do not want to deal with the coding and programming part of web-design.

  • I offer support and advice during the design phase.
  • I code for you, thereby turning your designs into standard compliant (XHTML 1.1 / CSS2) templates
  • I can also offer to turn them into a CMS (Content Management System) based on Silverstripe.
  • On top of that I can also take care of the hosting for you

In short: As a designer you get access to my knowledge and experience, and I make sure you can offer your clients a web ready product with eventually even hosting and support.

There are some things that are important for you to realize when cooperating with me:

  • It is important for me that the people you work for are your clients, not mine. During the design phase I will not contact your client, nor should I during the coding phase. But the CMS system that I implement comes with support and your clients need to get an introduction into that CMS. I therefor need to contact your clients and your clients need to be able to contact me when they have questions (and in my experience they always will, and it ensures that the customer is satisfied with a project when they know how to use it).
  • In order to successfully create a website for your client based on your designs I need to have access to your designs in digital form and you have to be aware I might need you to work in a certain way - this will be discussed beforehand. This might mean you have to work differently from the way you are used to work.  In short: a 300 dpi tif image is not what I need, I need to have a layered psd at 72 dpi (screen resolution).
  • Certain things work differently for web as compared to print. You have to think about the flow of text and elements on your page, you have to be aware of the way your layout might change based on different screen sizes, and you have to think about what happens when the visitor of a site hovers over an element or clicks on it (in a menu for instance). These are some of the things you have to think about.
  • The web is advancing with great strides - and I have seen it advance enormously since the days of Explorer 2 / Netscape 2. However there are limitations - and my guess is there always will be. There might be certain things you heard about that you would love me to implement, but it could be that these things are outdated, proven not to work from a usability stand point or these things might work in some browsers but not in others because they are too new (and therefor still need a few years to become a usable standard).
  • Based on the previous point it might be that you need to create not one but two designs: one for the visitors of the website who have more modern computers and use browsers that are ready for more modern features and the other design for people who have less modern computers/ less advanced browsers or who choose not to enable certain features.

Later - in the chapters on the right - I will start to explain various points that might be of interest to you if you want to design for the web and are not or do not want to be a coder.

Art / Alien Saints Project

Under the name AnnoMedia I offer web-design, coding/templating and services for designers. Under the name Alien Saints I offer designs for the people who are interested in something different. Alien-Saints.com is the website where I show my art, but it is also the entry point for those who want something a bit more extreme.

Aliensaints

Alien Saints

Contact / Impressum

My name is Jeroen Goulooze. And I am a freelance webdesigner/coder. I live and work in Berlin, Friedrichshain (Kreutzigerstraße 18 10247 Berlin to be exact). My website is www.AnnoMedia.com.

I can be contacted by phone with the number (++49) (0)15 772 753 760 when you are in Germany. You can also contact me via (++31) (0)6 13 203 439 when you are in the Netherlands, but it can be that I have to call you back when using that number because I do not always have it with me.

You can also contact me by email.

That's me