Web development trends 2020

Here are some web trends for 2020:

Responsive web design in 2020 should be a given because every serious project that you create should look good and be completely usable on all devices. But there’s no need to over-complicate things.

Web Development in 2020: What Coding Tools You Should Learn article gives an overview of recommendations what you learn to become a web developer in 2020.

You might have seen Web 3.0 on some slides. What is the definition of web 3 we are talking about here?
There seems to be many different to choose from… Some claim that you need to blockchain the cloud IOT otherwise you’ll just get a stack overflow in the mainframe but I don’t agree on that.

Information on the web address bar will be reduced on some web browsers. With the release of Chrome 79, Google completes its goal of erasing www from the browser by no longer allowing Chrome users to automatically show the www trivial subdomain in the address bar.

You still should target to build quality web site and avoid the signs of a low-quality web site. Get good inspiration for your web site design.

Still a clear and logical structure is the first thing that needs to be turned over in mind before the work on the website gears up. The website structure for search robots is its internal links. The more links go to a page, the higher its priority within the website, and the more times the search engine crawls it.

You should upgrade your web site, but you need to do it sensibly and well. Remember that a site upgrade can ruin your search engine visibility if you do it badly. The biggest risk to your site getting free search engine visibility is site redesign. Bad technology selection can ruin the visibility of a new site months before launch. Many new sites built on JavaScript application frameworks do not benefit in any way from the new technologies. Before you go into this bandwagon, you should think critically about whether your site will benefit from the dynamic capabilities of these technologies more than they can damage your search engine visibility. Well built redirects can help you keep the most outbound links after site changes.

If you go to the JavaScript framework route on your web site, keep in mind that there are many to choose, and you need to choose carefully to find one that fits for your needs and is actively developed also in the future.
JavaScript survey: Devs love a bit of React, but Angular and Cordova declining. And you’re not alone… a chunk of pros also feel JS is ‘overly complex’

Keep in mind the recent changes on the video players and Google analytics. And for animated content keep in mind that GIF animations exists still as a potential tool to use.

Keep in mind the the security. There is a skill gap in security for many. I’m not going to say anything that anyone who runs a public-facing web server doesn’t already know: the majority of these automated blind requests are for WordPress directories and files. PHP exploits are a distant second. And there are many other things that are automatically attacked. Test your site with security scanners.
APIs now account for 40% of the attack surface for all web-enabled apps. OWASP has identified 10 areas where enterprises can lower that risk. There are many vulnerability scanning tools available. Check also How to prepare and use Docker for web pentest . Mozilla has a nice on-line tool for web site security scanning.

The slow death of Flash continues. If you still use Flash, say goodbye to it. Google says goodbye to Flash, will stop indexing Flash content in search.

Use HTTPS on your site because without it your site rating will drop on search engines visibility. It is nowadays easy to get HTTPS certificates.

Write good content and avoid publishing fake news on your site. Finland is winning the war on fake news. What it’s learned may be crucial to Western democracy,

Think to who you are aiming to your business web site to. Analyze who is your “true visitor” or “power user”. A true visitor is a visitor to a website who shows a genuine interest in the content of the site. True visitors are the people who should get more of your site and have the potential to increase the sales and impact of your business. The content that your business offers is intended to attract visitors who are interested in it. When they show their interest, they are also very likely to be the target group of the company.

Should you think of your content management system (CMS) choice? Flexibility, efficiency, better content creation: these are just some of the promised benefits of a new CMS. Here is How to convince your developers to change CMS.

html5-display

Here are some fun for the end:

Did you know that if a spider creates a web at a place?
The place is called a website

Confession: How JavaScript was made.

Should We Rebrand JavaScript?

2,361 Comments

  1. Tomi Engdahl says:

    The Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine is a top target of conspiracy theories
    https://www.cbsnews.com/news/covid-vaccine-pfizer-conspiracy-theories/

    The Pfizer-BioNTech coronavirus vaccine became a target of conspiracy theories and disinformation campaigns as soon as it was announced, reaching millions of people on sites like Twitter, Reddit and 4chan, according to a recent analysis from a cyber defense firm.

    COVID-19 conspiracy narratives, like the false belief that the vaccine was delayed for political reasons, flourished on social networks in the fall and early winter, according to the New York tech security firm Blackbird.

    These bogus notions about the vaccines, amplified by a relatively small number of fake accounts and real influencers, reached millions of people, Khaled said.

    “Bots and influencers work in tandem,” he explained. “We can’t prove if they collude behind the scenes, but social media data shows clearly that they influence each other by sharing the same links, repeating the same phrases, tagging the same accounts and jumping in on trending hashtags.”

    For example, some botnets reach real influencers by spamming conspiracy links to trending hashtags. Another common tactic is to generate fake trends by synchronizing hundreds of posts using similar anti-vaccine and pseudoscientific claims.

    One common tactic is to co-opt trending topics by spamming content with provocative rhetoric that is intended to encourage engagement. This helps raise the visibility and reach of a piece of content, which increases the likelihood that a politically aligned influencer will further share the content. The content gains momentum by muddying the waters between facts and falsehoods.

    Reply
  2. Tomi Engdahl says:

    Sometähtien taustavoimat
    Kilpailu Instagram-näkyvyydestä on kovaa, ja sen eteen tekevät töitä yhä useammat ammattilaiset.
    https://yle.fi/uutiset/3-11921277

    Reply
  3. Tomi Engdahl says:

    Näin huijarit VÄÄRENTÄVÄT! VARO TÄTÄ YLEISTYVÄÄ HUIJAUSTA!
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1z8o_E_eWRg

    Tällä videolla näytän käytännössä miten huijarit tällä hetkellä huijaavat! Kuittiväärennöksiä ja silmänkääntötemppuja verkkopankissa. Näitä on mahdoton huomata!

    Reply
  4. Tomi Engdahl says:

    Privacy in the time after cookies – Google Chrome’s new FLoC tracking https://www.forbes.com/sites/zakdoffman/2021/05/01/stop-using-google-chrome-on-your-iphone-android-macbook-and-pc/
    Now that end of the third party cookie era is coming to an end, other tracking methods are being experimented with. Zak Doffman discusses in detail what kind of privacy impact Chrome’s new FLoC tracking has.

    Reply
  5. Tomi Engdahl says:

    Jos sopivaa lohkoa ei löydy WordPressin lisäosista tai hakemistosta, voi sellaisen toteuttaa itse JavaScriptin tai PHP:n avulla.

    WordPressin mukana tulevilla Gutenberg-lohkoilla on rajansa – laajenna mahdollisuuksia JavaScriptin tai PHP:n avulla
    https://www.karhuhelsinki.fi/blogi/wordpressin-mukana-tulevilla-gutenberg-lohkoilla-rajansa-laajenna-mahdollisuuksia?utm_source=facebook&utm_medium=display&fbclid=IwAR3TOwwvnZj4YScMZHoxBRWntFSf2dE-nq1KoB1TlT-nONDZgPXulf9VV2c

    WordPressin päätoimisena editorina on vuoden 2018 joulukuusta saakka toiminut Gutenberg-lohkoeditori, joka julkaistiin WordPressin version 5.0 mukana. Uusi editori ei kuitenkaan saanut julkaisun aikana erityisen ruusuista vastaanottoa, sillä editorin päivittynyt käyttöliittymä ei erilaisten ongelmien lisäksi ollut kaikkien mieleen. Editori on sittemmin saanut useita päivityksiä, joiden jälkeen suurimmat julkaisun ajan ongelmat on saatu korjattua.

    Reply
  6. Tomi Engdahl says:

    Guidance on Strengthening the Code of Practice on Disinformation https://digital-strategy.ec.europa.eu/en/library/guidance-strengthening-code-practice-disinformation
    The EU Commission publishes its guidance on how the Code of Practice on Disinformation, the first of its kind worldwide, should be strengthened to become a more effective tool for countering disinformation. Full report as PDF:
    https://ec.europa.eu/newsroom/dae/redirection/document/76495

    Reply
  7. Tomi Engdahl says:

    The VC View: Identity = Zero Trust for Everything
    https://www.securityweek.com/vc-view-identity-zero-trust-everything

    Identity very much seems to be an acquired taste… Most everyone’s first experience with identity comes down to usernames and passwords. And that’s enough for most users, “just let me get past this screen so I can do what I’m trying to do.”

    Historians will remember passwords to be a temporary inconvenience and a cause of struggle and data breaches. They’ll think, “Of course ‘X’ is the best way to validate someone & something is who they say they are. Creating, remembering & tracking passwords! Amazing that our earlier generations had to deal with it.”

    Luckily we have enterprises forcing constant evolution in identity out of business-driven use cases. As organizations get larger and become more complex, balance gets exponentially difficult to achieve: the struggle to make sure users have access to the resources they need and don’t have unnecessary/accidental/insecure access to things they don’t need (i.e. authorization). Automation and innovation in identity is a must-have for all organizations, especially the large enterprise.

    Authorization has only gotten harder over time because business resources have continued to change and grow: endpoints, files, databases, internal applications, saas applications, service accounts, cloud-hosted applications, shared/public compute. This all leading to identity silos (i.e. entitlements on Salesforce different than Active Directory) and reducing visibility.

    In the end, identity is still one of the most effective levers in security. Without identities, everything else (data, endpoints, applications, etc.) are unusable because either everyone will have access to everything or to nothing without identity controls. Identity projects are tough but worth doing.

    The most recent trend identity nowadays is in Zero Trust. This concept has been evolving for years now and further accelerated by the pandemic. Zero Trust is building controls around an interesting premise: the idea that every resource will one day be internet-facing.

    In 2021, I predict that most folks with identity and zero trust in mind will look at a Zero Trust Network Access (ZTNA) solution first. It’s one of the easier projects to deploy and there is existing work to leverage. The overhead, cost and management required for existing networking controls like VPNs are no longer acceptable at our current massive work-from-home scale. For every company, ZTNA, will likely look a bit different ranging from use cases that are simply more cost-effective VPN to use cases that look a lot like SSO or DLP use cases.

    Beyond ZTNA, we’re already seen the concept of Zero Trust extend in other categories even if it hasn’t been explicitly called out. Zero Trust in SaaS Applications. Zero Trust in Privileged Credentials. Zero Trust for developer access. Preparation for Zero Trust (cleaning up excess entitlements.) Eventually I envision we’ll recreate the same defense-in-depth we know and love from the corporate network world in the shared resources (public cloud, multi-tenant applications, etc) world; with identity at the forefront.

    Reply
  8. Tomi Engdahl says:

    WPSec.com is an online WordPress security scanner for finding WordPress vulnerabilities. Scan your site for free to make sure your site is secure!
    https://wpsec.com/

    Reply
  9. Tomi Engdahl says:

    Studies That Are Exciting But Less Likely To Be True Are Cited More Often In Academia
    https://www.iflscience.com/editors-blog/studies-that-are-exciting-but-less-likely-to-be-true-are-cited-more-often-in-academia/

    The frequency with which scientific papers are cited is often used as a measure of quality, for example determining if the authors get grants or promotions. It would be a major problem, then, if bad research was cited more often than good work.

    Reply
  10. Tomi Engdahl says:

    Baristas say that TikTok is ruining the industry as customers order ‘ridiculous’ drinks
    https://www.mirror.co.uk/news/weird-news/baristas-say-tiktok-ruining-industry-24202948

    Josie Morales posted a picture of an order he received in Starbucks which had 13 changes to the original recipe, adding that people are trying to order drinks they have seen in viral TikTok posts

    A barista has complained that TikTok is ruining the coffee industry – as customers often come in and order ‘ridiculous’ drinks.

    Reply
  11. Tomi Engdahl says:

    Allie Jones / Vox:
    An investigation into “loop giveaways” on Instagram, where lesser influencers are paid by marketing firms to post about giveaways that no one ever seems to win

    Who wins Instagram giveaways? An investigation.
    https://www.vox.com/the-goods/22451928/instagram-giveaway-who-wins?scrolla=5eb6d68b7fedc32c19ef33b4

    Influencers and marketing firms keep teaming up to give you cars, cash, and more. No one ever seems to win.

    In 1851, the inventor and entrepreneur Benjamin T. Babbitt began traveling around the United States in a wagon, offering consumers free lithographic prints with the purchase of baking soda. According to historian Wendy A. Woloson, this new mode of marketing inspired enterprising salesmen to launch their own prize giveaways, many of which ended up being scams. We can trace the history of the giveaway from the 1850s right up through March 23, 2021, when Kris Jenner, the matriarch of the Kardashian family known fondly for working harder than Satan, posted a photograph of herself on her Instagram page sitting on a grand staircase surrounded by thousands of dollars’ worth of Louis Vuitton luggage.

    “Who wants a 20k USD preloaded credit card + the luxury purses pictured here with me,” she asked, adding a credit card emoji, four exclamation points, and two notices that the post was an #ad. (An ad for what, exactly? It’s complicated.) All entrants had to do, said Jenner, was follow a few dozen other Instagram accounts and comment on Jenner’s post.

    Peering at the display, I wondered: Who wins these things? The answer has been difficult to ascertain.

    (“Girl this looks like a scam,” said one commenter on a Kylie Jenner giveaway post from November 2020. “No one ever wins these,” said another.)

    Plenty of lesser influencers have gotten in on the action, too.

    This kind of suspicious marketing is what’s known as a “loop” giveaway: The lesser influencers and brands pay a marketing firm like Social Stance to be on the must-follow list, and Social Stance pays the featured influencer, like Schroeder, to post about the giveaway. Overnight, the influencers and brands that bought in can gain thousands of followers. (The cost to participate in such a scheme reportedly ranges from a few hundred dollars to tens of thousands.)

    The company, which did not respond to a request for an interview, describes its business this way on its website: “We partner with celebrities, cultural icons and established business’ [sic] to drive large scale influence and rapid growth of brands.” On its “Results” page, it claims that the Schroeder giveaway led to 9,400 new followers for participants.

    The benefit to the average contest entrant is less clear. The company does not disclose how it picks the lucky Instagram user to win the Canon and the MacBook and the Gucci. A few days after Schroeder first advertised the giveaway, she deleted the post without announcing a winner.

    Reading this, I was undoubtedly reassured, but still I wondered: Who wins? Curated Businesses is slightly more forthcoming, at least, about how it conducts its giveaways, though it also did not respond to a request for an interview, so I’m unable to confirm that the following is true. On the same FAQ page, the company claims that it obtains the “necessary government issued lottery permits for our campaigns and the final draw is conducted by an independent third party and overseen by a certified scrutineer.”

    A certified scrutineer! Despite this official-sounding surveillance mechanism, entering one of these contests still feels a bit like writing your name on a piece of paper and throwing it into the street in the hope that someone will find it and bring you a million dollars. Has this worked for anyone?

    “If I see 10,000 comments, I’m not bothering”

    Unlike most digital agencies dedicated to the project of giving away luxury items on Instagram, Curated Businesses does make a point to announce at least some winners after its contests conclude. The company has a separate Instagram page, @cbwinners, where it shares the Instagram handles, and sometimes the photos, of people who have allegedly won those prepaid Visas and designer bags. The winners tend to be young women, probably because the people inclined to enter such contests tend to be young women. They look real enough, but I could not independently confirm their identities or their wins — I contacted over a dozen of them on Instagram, and no one responded.

    Occasionally, Curated Businesses posts Instagram-DM testimonials from winners

    But Curated Businesses is just one marketing firm among many. Plenty of smaller giveaway schemes have proliferated on Instagram, some of them orchestrated by influencers themselves.

    “Another lucky winner”

    He said that, oh, yes, you have to pay taxes on it.

    “Many winners are surprised to find that they owe taxes on the new car, vacation, or other prize that they won when they receive a form 1099 reporting the income to them,” he explained. “Winning a $60,000 new car could mean you end up with a roughly $20,000 tax bill that you don’t have the extra cash to pay, leading many people to instead take the lower ‘cash’ option for prizes, or to sell the car for cash.”

    Sargent said this applies even if the company administering the prize is based in, say, Australia.

    Reply
  12. Tomi Engdahl says:

    The blog, called “From the Desk of Donald J. Trump,” was launched in May.

    Trump Shuts Down Much-Hyped Blog
    https://www.forbes.com/sites/jackbrewster/2021/06/02/trump-shuts-down-much-hyped-blog/

    Former President Donald Trump has shuttered his blog weeks after it went live, a senior aide confirmed to Forbes on Wednesday, ending a project his team launched with fanfare after the president was kicked off most social media platforms in January. 

    Reply
  13. Tomi Engdahl says:

    Google is releasing a broad core algorithm update later today on June 2, 2021.

    #Google #HeyGoogle #SEO

    Google Broad Core Algorithm Update Rolling Out June 2, 2021
    Google releases a broad core algorithm update on June 2, 2021.
    https://www.searchenginejournal.com/google-broad-core-algorithm-update-rolling-out-june-2/409211/?utm_source=facebook.com&utm_medium=social&utm_campaign=facebook-auto-publish

    Google is releasing a broad core algorithm update today on June 2, 2021. This will be followed by another core update in July.

    https://www.searchenginejournal.com/core-algorithm-update-recovery/324587/

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    SEJ » News
    Google on Broad Core Algorithm Update Recovery – 4 Takeaways
    Roger Montti
    Roger Montti
    September 6, 2019
    7 min read
    423
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    Google on Broad Core Algorithm Update Recovery – 4 Takeaways

    Google’s John Mueller answered how long it takes to recover from the June 2019 broad core algorithm update. He offered four takeaways related to how to recover from a broad core algorithm update.

    Key Insights on How to Recover from Google’s Broad Core Algorithm Update
    Pages that lost traffic are not penalized
    Core update is about pages ranking better if they’re more relevant (or losing ranking if less relevant)
    Don’t have to wait until the next core update to recover
    It’s not generally about spam

    Reply
  14. Tomi Engdahl says:

    Joshua Darr / FiveThirtyEight:
    Researchers say Americans are more likely to vote for one party up and down the ballot when local newspapers close and they get their news from national outlets — The laws of supply and demand aren’t working for local news. — The local news business was devastated by COVID-19, even though consumers wanted more of its product.

    Local News Coverage Is Declining — And That Could Be Bad For American Politics
    https://fivethirtyeight.com/features/local-news-coverage-is-declining-and-that-could-be-bad-for-american-politics/

    The laws of supply and demand aren’t working for local news.

    The local news business was devastated by COVID-19, even though consumers wanted more of its product. Visits to local news websites spiked by 89 percent from February to March 2020, but newspapers did not profit from having more readers: Ad revenues for the largest newspaper publisher in the nation, Gannett, dropped 35 percent from 2019 to 2020. Journalists were laid off, furloughed or forced to accept early retirements or pay cuts.

    The pandemic, however, merely accelerated a crisis in local journalism that is now at least two decades old. From 2000 to 2018, weekday newspaper circulation fell from 55.8 million households to an estimated 28.6 million; between 2008 and 2019, newsroom employment fell by 51 percent; and since 2004, more than 1,800 local newspapers have closed across the nation.

    Perhaps even more alarming is that the public is largely unaware of this crisis. In late 2018, 71 percent of Americans told the Pew Research Center that their local news media was doing very or somewhat well financially, even though only 14 percent said they had paid for local news in the past year. But if local newspapers go away or are weakened beyond recognition, a real possibility given their steep decline and Americans’ lack of awareness of it, we won’t just feel nostalgic for them — we’ll feel actual consequences.

    A growing body of research has found that government is worse off when local news suffers. In fact, inadequate local news has been linked to more corruption, less competitive elections, weaker municipal finances and a prevalence of party-line politicians who don’t bring benefits back to their districts. It’s not just government performance, however. My research with Matthew Hitt of Colorado State University and Johanna Dunaway of Texas A&M University shows that when local newspapers close, people don’t find another local option. Instead, they get their news from national outlets, and in the absence of local news, people are more likely to vote for one party up and down the ballot.

    What explains this change? Local political news offers Americans what political scientist Lilliana Mason calls a “cross-cutting identity” — or something that connects partisans on a different dimension instead of further dividing them along party lines. Put another way, when people read news about their neighborhoods, schools and municipal services, they think like locals. When they read about national political conflict, they think like partisans.

    In our research we found that less local news meant more polarization.

    In our book about this experiment, we measured how banning national politics affected the topics on the opinion page and the attitudes of people in the Palm Springs area, and we found a dramatic change. Pieces about Trump dropped from one-third of all content to zero; mentions of political parties fell by more than half; and op-eds and letters about local issues like architectural preservation and traffic congestion increased.

    The economics of local news makes experiments like The Desert Sun’s difficult to replicate, however. More than half of the daily newspapers in circulation in the U.S. are owned by a private equity firm or hedge fund, which infamously cuts staff and other costs as much as possible.

    The market is simply not providing local newspapers the resources they need to deliver the civic benefits they’re capable of, which raises the question as to what extent the government should step in to help. People have long debated whether freedom of the press means freedom from government assistance, but on this point, history is clear: Government policies like tax breaks and exemptions from some labor laws and minimum wage and overtime rules have benefited newspapers since the 18th century. And as such, a bipartisan group of lawmakers is trying to find modern solutions to the local media industry’s current problems.

    Ultimately, the stakes for local journalism are high. If the current bipartisan efforts to assist local news become defined along party lines and fail, future generations may not be able to depend on local news as we know it, and if our research is any indication, America’s political divides will continue to deepen as a result.

    Reply
  15. Tomi Engdahl says:

    How art direction in web design creates more engaging experiences
    https://www.editorx.com/shaping-design/article/art-direction-web-design?utm_source=facebook&utm_medium=cpc&utm_campaign=fb_pp%7Cp_edx-en-tof-content-blog-traffic-interest-broad-4%2F1%2F2021&experiment_id=23847493648980429&fbclid=IwAR3Lgdvj3AmlxGTBX9tjcKDosmobs0qnks-cFWwCu2e6FYLEA8reND5KzQk

    Unlike print, web design doesn’t usually receive art direction. Leading designers discuss why, and what we’re missing as a result.

    Advertising and print design have a long tradition of art direction. On the web, however, a lot of websites still look very similar and lack the kind of consideration that we got accustomed to in graphic design.

    By applying art direction to our web design projects, we can create powerful works that are striking, memorable and stand out in today’s busy digital landscape.

    Designer Andy Clarke, author of Art Direction for the Web, describes it like this: “[Art direction] uses design techniques to intentionally evoke an emotional response from someone when they read an article, use a product, or visit a website.”

    Combine function with feelings

    Back in the day when Flash ruled the web, we’d see a lot of playful and expressive digital experiences. Since then, the web has evolved to be more rational – dominated by systems and consistent design languages, data, and best practices.

    “It’s true that digital went too far during those early days,” believes David Navarro, executive creative director at full-service creative agency Ueno (recently acquired by Twitter). “Fortunately, we started to build structures to make experiences more centered on what users need than what brands have to say. It guarantees the solidness of the medium, but in some cases it leaves the expressiveness of art direction aside.”

    David finds that we’re often too focused on following web design trends and best practices, while there’s actually a huge opportunity to go back to a more emotional digital space and combine function with feelings. Art direction can play a massive role in that.

    “Long-term memories are formed through an emotional response,” David explains. “Usually, people come to websites, use digital products, and interact with digital experiences with a purpose in mind. It can be very transactional and functional – checking the news or looking for information about a product or service – and with art direction we can help them do that in a way that makes them feel better, entertained, or engaged. It provokes an emotion that lasts.”

    “Story should always be given priority over format and since every format has its strengths and weaknesses, for me, the best experiences utilise a variety of mediums.”

    Find out what sets your project’s brand apart

    Before jumping into design, it’s crucial to take the time to understand what brand and business values your visual palette needs to convey, advises designer Paul Woods, CEO and chief creative officer at global design consultancy Edenspiekermann.

    “Typically, I will never lay down a single pixel before we have aligned with the client on three design principles – no more, no less – and we have done a workshop to define a visual compass of dos and don’ts using reference material,” he reveals.

    When you develop your concept, Pascal suggests creating freely – without grids, limitations or best practices in mind. Try to set the overall look and feel first. Find the right ‘rhythm’, and only then dive into the details and look for repeating patterns like hierarchies, colors and typefaces.

    Figure out the best way to communicate your message

    “Think about what audience you’re designing for first,” Pascal recommends. “Are they visiting a website to get information quickly, or do they want to get entertained?”

    Pascal, who founded the Brutalist Websites directory, firmly believes that less is more.

    “Take away stuff until it gets bland or broken,” he advises. “Don’t hide too much – users won’t experience websites as a whole. Make things obvious, unless you want them to explore it by themselves. Set the tone of your language right: if you’re polite elsewhere, you should be polite on the website too.”

    Paul Woods favours a similar approach and warns against getting bogged down with functionality from the start.

    “It sounds like a cliché, but original visual concepts come from tinkering around, trying out unexpected combinations, and thinking blue sky,” he points out. “They do not come from out-of-the-box UI kits, looking for inspiration in the web design echo chamber, and certainly not from looking at Dribbble, sorry! For initial visual concepts, I would encourage designers to think in style boards rather than interfaces to avoid getting stuck in details.”

    Create clarity and emotional connections

    A few years ago, creative director and advisor Dan Mall worked with media company Dotdash, formerly known as About.com. The site had been around since the late 1990s and – at the start of 2016 – was still the 40th-largest site on the web in page views. It was a big portal where you could find information about everything, but it was starting to show its age and traffic started to plummet.

    “CEO Neil Vogel described it like this: ‘No one wants to read about symptoms of colitis on the same site you’re learning how to make beer-battered chicken’,” Dan recalls. “The site was generic; there was no brand equity or affinity.”

    Reply
  16. Tomi Engdahl says:

    Ben Dummett / Wall Street Journal:
    Stack Overflow, which has 100M+ monthly visitors, says it will be acquired by Prosus, a European tech giant and Tencent’s largest shareholder, for $1.8B — Deal is Prosus’ biggest investment in online learning and comes weeks after it sold a chunk from its massive Tencent holding

    Stack Overflow Sold to Tech Giant Prosus for $1.8 Billion
    Deal is Prosus’ biggest investment in online learning and comes weeks after it sold a chunk from its massive Tencent holding
    https://www.wsj.com/articles/software-developer-community-stack-overflow-sold-to-tech-giant-prosus-for-1-8-billion-11622648400?mod=djemalertNEWS

    Prosus PRX -1.25% NV said it struck a $1.8 billion deal to acquire Stack Overflow, an online community for software developers, in a bet on growing demand for online tech learning.

    Based in New York, closely held Stack Overflow operates a question-and-answer website used by software developers and other types of workers such as financial professionals and marketers who increasingly need coding skills. It attracts more than 100 million visitors monthly, the company says.

    Prosus, one of Europe’s most valuable tech companies, is best known as the largest shareholder in Chinese internet and videogaming giant Tencent Holdings Ltd. Listed in Amsterdam, Prosus signaled its appetite for deal making when it sold a small portion of its equity stake in Tencent in April for $14.6 billion. The Stack Overflow deal ranks among Prosus’ biggest acquisitions.

    Reply
  17. Tomi Engdahl says:

    Blackstone acquires tech publisher IDG for $1.3B, as private equity strikes again
    https://techcrunch.com/2021/06/03/blackstone-acquires-tech-publisher-idg-for-1-3b-as-private-equity-strikes-again/?tpcc=ECFB2021

    It’s been a busy week for private equity, with Cloudera, Stack Overflow and FireEye coming off the board on Tuesday and Wednesday. Today Blackstone bought media and data company IDG for $1.3 billion.

    With IDG, Blackstone gets tech analyst firm IDC along with a collection of tech publications that includes CIO, Computerworld, InfoWorld, Macworld, Network World, PCWorld and Tech Hive. The media publishing arm was once a powerhouse in the 1990s tech publishing world, although its shine has faded in recent years as the publishing industry in general has come under intense pressure.

    The company launched in 1964 with the consulting side of the business, but founder Pat McGovern had a broader vision and began the publishing side of the company in 1967 with the launch of Computerworld.

    It’s worth noting that Verizon Media, which owns this publication along with Engadget, was also recently sold to a private equity firm, Apollo Global, as the private equity push into all parts of the technology ecosystem continues.

    Reply
  18. Tomi Engdahl says:

    WordPress force installs Jetpack security update on 5 million sites https://www.bleepingcomputer.com/news/security/wordpress-force-installs-jetpack-security-update-on-5-million-sites/
    Automattic, the company behind the WordPress content management system, force deploys a security update on over five million websites running the Jetpack WordPress plug-in. The vulnerability was found in the Carousel feature and its option to display comments for each image, with nguyenhg_vcs being the one credited for responsibly disclosing the security bug. The Jetpack development team added that it found no evidence that the vulnerability has been exploited in the wild.

    Reply
  19. Tomi Engdahl says:

    Ben Thompson / Stratechery:
    Stratechery’s Ben Thompson announces a service called Passport to let creators manage their subscriptions and communicate with subscribers — Seven years ago, when I initially launched the paid Daily Update, there weren’t really any tools designed for independent subscription businesses …

    https://stratechery.com/2021/passport/

    Seven years ago, when I initially launched the paid Daily Update, there weren’t really any tools designed for independent subscription businesses; my solution has incorporated a number of disparate services tied together, and while new companies have been formed around both paid newsletters and paid podcasts, no one has created a service for a site like Stratechery. So I decided to build it. It’s called Passport.

    Stratechery, in a literal sense, is a website; you can choose to receive content from that website via email and, as of a year ago, podcast. Stratechery in a figurative sense, though, is my home on the Internet, a spot on the infinite digital frontier that is mine. This speaks to the first reason to build my own solution: while WordPress, the CMS that underpins Stratechery, is open source, and thus something I can control, the various services I used to manage subscriptions and send email were not; I wanted to rectify that.

    Reply
  20. Tomi Engdahl says:

    Casey Newton / Platformer:
    Trump shutting down his blog shows the significance of social media platforms’ amplification mechanics and how they give free and huge reach to the worst actors — What a failed blog tells us about the power of Twitter — Last month, after months of hyping up a forthcoming “social media platform” …

    Trump deplatforms himself
    What a failed blog tells us about the power of Twitter
    https://www.platformer.news/p/trump-deplatforms-himself

    Last month, after months of hyping up a forthcoming “social media platform” that would serve as a new home base online following his removal from Twitter, Facebook, YouTube, Snapchat, and other networks, former President Donald Trump unveiled a simple blog.

    Launched on May 4, “From The Desk of Donald J. Trump” offered the sort of staccato, dyspeptic rants that until recently drove 90 percent of American news cycles. For 29 days, the site offered a vision of the nightmare universe we would be living in had the social networks not banned Trump following his incitement of a coup against his own government. In his posts, Trump regularly promoted the lie that the election had been stolen, attacked his fellow Republicans for insufficient fealty, and talked about how much better life had been when he was in office.

    But now the blog is over.

    As someone who both found Trump and his presidency repugnant and who makes my living posting to the web, I was of course delighted to read about the former president’s crushing defeat in the rough-and-tumble world of digital content creation. But the lessons from Trump’s failed blog are actually quite important, and worth a moment’s reflection as we wait for his next incarnation online.

    There are two primary questions we wind up asking about problematic users of social networks. The first is whether they should have the ability to post at all — platform-level freedom of speech. And the second is whether the platform should amplify their account or their posts to other users — what the technologist Aza Raskin has called “freedom of reach.”

    In the wake of Trump’s deplatforming, his supporters have framed the issue almost exclusively as a question of free speech.

    In truth, nothing has happened since January 6 that took away Trump’s ability to speak and express his opinion. Indeed, on most days in recent weeks, he had taken to his blog to do just that. Last Tuesday, a day after DeSantis signed the bill, Trump published 10 separate blog posts on all manner of subjects.

    What Trump’s blog lacked, though, was reach. According to the Post, Trump’s blog peaked at 159,000 social interactions — paltry by the standards of a man used to seeing social metrics in the millions — and the peak arrived on his blog’s first day. It has been downhill for The Desk of Donald J. Trump ever since.

    The disconnect highlights the actual utility of social platforms for Trump — especially of Twitter, where he focused almost all of his efforts. The power was not that they offered him a place to speak. Rather, it was that they amplified it in crucial ways, for free, to a massive worldwide audience.

    Twitter added Trump to its suggested user list and kept him there for years, even after he had begun to promote the racist birther conspiracy against Barack Obama. Trending topics continuously highlighted Trump’s latest outrageous remarks, mostly without context, driving more attention. Ranking systems tuned to favor conflict promoted Trump’s bile into nearly every timeline on the platform at one point or another.

    It’s true that Trump never would have attained the reach he got through Twitter were it not also the case that the entire Western media has the app open all day, often using the controversies found there as a de facto assigning editor. As with every platform story, social networks are not the only relevant actors here. A unified press corps that took Trump seriously as a mortal threat to democracy from the start, rather than as a clownish sideshow that was good for ratings, may have given him less airtime.

    For platforms, there could hardly be a more powerful story about the significance of their amplification mechanics. By now, many of the platform executives I know are tired of the constant drumbeat of stories about how their networks spread misinformation, hate speech, conspiracy theories, and other harmful content. But the Trump story illustrates vividly why they matter. For the worst actors on their platforms, free reach is almost the entire appeal of using them.

    Trump will be back online somewhere eventually, of course. It’s worth noting that for all his platform problems, Trump remains the leader of the Republican Party, and seems likely to run again in 2024 if he can. For that trick, he’ll need reach — and he’s actively searching for a platform to give it to him.

    But it’s unclear whether a platform designed to be an echo chamber for conservatives can grant nearly the cultural or political benefits to Trump that Twitter, Facebook, or YouTube did.

    Reply
  21. Tomi Engdahl says:

    From https://www.facebook.com/654533812/posts/10159843563966844/?substory_index=25

    Miten kirjoittaa asiateksti niin, että edes aiheesta kiinnostunut ei jaksa lukea?

    – Älä otsikoi.
    – Pimitä pääidea.
    – Kirjoita laveasti.

    Lehtijutut ovat osittain tällaisia nykyään. Pääuutista joutuu etsimään jutun lopusta. Alun voi ihan rauhassa skrollata ohi lukematta sitä ollenkaan, jos on kiire (yleensä on).

    Joskus aiemmin pääasia kerrottiin ingressissä tai jutun alussa, ja lisätietoa voi halutessaan etsiä loppujutusta. Onkohan toimittajakoulutus nykyään muuttunut?
    Mitä kiireisemmäksi aika on mennyt, sitä vaikeampi on löytää jutun ydintä.

    Oletko saanut jonkin salaisen viestintäohjeen haltuusi? Veikkaan, että jatkossa on ainakin seuraavat kohdat:
    – Käytä pitkiä, vaikeita ja epämääräisiä sanoja.
    – Käytä predikaattina mieluiten vain olla-verbiä; hätätilassa voidaan sallia ”tehdä” tai ”suorittaa”.
    – Huolehdi siitä, että virkkeessä on vähintään kolme lausetta ja kappaleessa yli viisi virkettä, mieluiten sellaisia, jotka eivät liity toisiinsa.
    – Älä ilmaise tekijää. Jos lause puhuu jostain oikeasta tekemisestä, käytä tehdään-tyyppisiä muotoja.

    Jukka Korpela Lisäksi kannattanee unohtaa myös välimerkkien käyttö tai vaihtoehtoisesti käyttää niitä ,,, hieman liikaa….

    Itse lisäisin ohjeeksi, että vaihda joka toiseksi verbiksi “tuottaa” tai vaihtoehtoisesti “toteuttaa”.

    Jos on pakko ilmaista tekijä, käytä sanaa “toimesta”

    Aloita teksti jaarittelemalla vähintään puoli sivua ummet ja lammet “jo muinaiset roomalaiset…” tai muuta vastaavaa.

    Asemoi teksti myös ilman ylimääräisiä kappalejakoja sivulle laidasta laitaan!
    Tämä on aina tehokas karkotin.

    Reply
  22. Tomi Engdahl says:

    Nigeria suspends Twitter operations, says platform ‘undermines its corporate existence’

    Reply
  23. Tomi Engdahl says:

    Nigeria suspends Twitter operations, says platform ‘undermines its corporate existence’
    https://techcrunch.com/2021/06/04/nigeria-suspends-twitter-operations-says-platform-undermines-its-corporate-existence/?tpcc=ECFB2021

    Through its Ministry of Information and Culture today, the Nigerian government announced its decision to suspend the operations of social media platform Twitter in the country.

    The statement, made by Minister of Information and Culture, Lai Mohammed, and signed off by his media aide Segun Adeyemi, could see telecoms in the country prevent Nigerians from using Twitter.

    Here’s the statement issued by the ministry:

    The Federal Government has suspended indefinitely the operations of the microblogging and social networking service Twitter in Nigeria. The Minister of Information and Culture, Alhaji Lai Mohammed, announced the suspension in a statement issued in Abuja on Friday, citing the presistent use of the platform for activities that are capable of undermining Nigeria’s corporate existence.

    The Minister said the Federal Government has also directed the National Broadcasting Commission (NBC) to immediately commence the process of licensing all OTT and social media operations in Nigeria.

    Today’s announcement is a culmination of events that have happened this past week. Yesterday, Twitter deleted tweets and videos of President Muhammadu Buhari making threats of punishment to a sect called IPOB in the South-Eastern part of the country after he blamed them for attacks on government buildings. He then referenced Nigeria’s civil war events in the 1960s, which seemed to offend many Nigerians.

    Reply
  24. Tomi Engdahl says:

    Nigeria suspends Twitter
    https://techcrunch.com/2021/06/04/nigeria-suspends-twitter-operations-says-platform-undermines-its-corporate-existence/?tpcc=ECFB2021

    Through its Ministry of Information and Culture today, the Nigerian government announced its decision to suspend the operations of social media platform Twitter in the country.

    The statement, made by Minister of Information and Culture, Lai Mohammed, and signed off by his media aide Segun Adeyemi, could see telecoms in the country prevent Nigerians from using Twitter.

    Here’s the statement issued by the ministry:

    The Federal Government has suspended indefinitely the operations of the microblogging and social networking service Twitter in Nigeria. The Minister of Information and Culture, Alhaji Lai Mohammed, announced the suspension in a statement issued in Abuja on Friday, citing the presistent use of the platform for activities that are capable of undermining Nigeria’s corporate existence.

    The Minister said the Federal Government has also directed the National Broadcasting Commission (NBC) to immediately commence the process of licensing all OTT and social media operations in Nigeria.

    Today’s announcement is a culmination of events that have happened this past week. Yesterday, Twitter deleted tweets and videos of President Muhammadu Buhari making threats of punishment to a sect called IPOB in the South-Eastern part of the country after he blamed them for attacks on government buildings. He then referenced Nigeria’s civil war events in the 1960s, which seemed to offend many Nigerians.

    Reply
  25. Tomi Engdahl says:

    Justice Department Says It’ll No Longer Seize Reporters’ Records During Leak Investigations
    https://time.com/6071667/justice-department-reporters-investigations/

    The Justice Department said Saturday that it will no longer secretly obtain reporters’ records during leak investigations, a policy shift that abandons a practice decried by news organizations and press freedom groups.

    The reversal follows a pledge last month by President Joe Biden, who had said it was “simply, simply wrong” to seize journalists’ records and that he would not permit the Justice Department to continue the practice.

    Reply
  26. Tomi Engdahl says:

    The Autorité de la concurrence hands out a 220 millions fine to Google for favouring its own services in the online advertising sector https://www.autoritedelaconcurrence.fr/en/article/autorite-de-la-concurrence-hands-out-eu220-millions-fine-google-favouring-its-own-services
    Following referrals from News Corp Inc., Le Figaro group[1] and the Rossel La Voix group, the Autorité de la concurrence issues today a decision sanctioning Google, up to 220 million euros, for having abused its dominant position in the advertising server market for website and mobile applications publishers. Lisäksi:
    https://www.bleepingcomputer.com/news/google/google-fined-220-million-for-abusing-dominant-role-in-online-ads/

    Reply
  27. Tomi Engdahl says:

    Trump May Be Banned From Facebook, But He’s Still Reaching Millions—Through His Family
    https://www.forbes.com/sites/jemimamcevoy/2021/06/07/trump-may-be-banned-from-facebook-but-hes-still-reaching-millions-through-his-family/

    Though banned from Facebook for the next two years and Twitter permanently, former President Donald Trump still benefits from easy access to a large social media audience as he continues to receive boosts from allies, including family members, who help his messaging reach millions every month.

    Members of the Trump family, including the spouses of his three adult children, earned over 6.3 million interactions on posts and nearly 44 million views on videos shared on Facebook over the past month, according to data from CrowdTangle, an analytics tool owned by Facebook. 

    The majority of the activity came from three family members—Donald Trump Jr., Eric Trump and Lara Trump—all of whom frequently promote Trump’s policies and public appearances on their pages. 

    “One thing that became immediately clear: Mr. Trump’s most ardent supporters continue to spread his message—doing the work he has been unable to do himself,” read the analysis.

    Trump was banned permanently from Twitter and suspended “indefinitely” from Facebook in the days following the Jan. 6 Capitol riots. Facebook last week revised its ban to last just two years following feedback from Facebook’s Oversight Board, which criticized Trump’s open-ended suspension. The platform will consider his return in January 2022, with top Facebook executive Nick Clegg explaining the decision will depend on whether Trump foments violence online (spreading lies has no bearing on whether a public figure can be booted off the site, Clegg said). Without these platforms, Trump has been relying on press releases blasted out over email. A blog he launched to fill the social media void was shut down earlier this month after Trump was reportedly angered by reports of its measly traffic. 

    Reply
  28. Tomi Engdahl says:

    Adam Mosseri / Instagram:
    In the first of a series of blog posts, Instagram explains how it ranks Feed, Stories, Explore, and Reels, and addresses “shadowbanning” accusations — It’s hard to trust what you don’t understand. We want to do a better job of explaining how Instagram works.

    Shedding More Light on How Instagram Works
    https://about.instagram.com/blog/announcements/shedding-more-light-on-how-instagram-works

    It’s hard to trust what you don’t understand. We want to do a better job of explaining how Instagram works. There are a lot of misconceptions out there, and we recognize that we can do more to help people understand what we do. Today, we’re sharing the first in a series of posts that will shed more light on how Instagram’s technology works and how it impacts the experiences that people have across the app. This first post tries to answer questions like “How does Instagram decide what shows up for me first?”; “Why do some of my posts get more views than others?”; and “How does Instagram decide what to show me in Explore?”
    What is “the algorithm”?

    One of the main misconceptions we want to clear up is the existence of “The Algorithm.” Instagram doesn’t have one algorithm that oversees what people do and don’t see on the app. We use a variety of algorithms, classifiers, and processes, each with its own purpose. We want to make the most of your time, and we believe that using technology to personalize your experience is the best way to do that.

    Reply
  29. Tomi Engdahl says:

    https://about.instagram.com/blog/announcements/shedding-more-light-on-how-instagram-works
    The most important signals across Feed and Stories, roughly in order of importance, are:

    Information about the post. These are signals both about how popular a post is – think how many people have liked it – and more mundane information about the content itself, like when it was posted, how long it is if it’s a video, and what location, if any, was attached to it.
    Information about the person who posted. This helps us get a sense for how interesting the person might be to you, and includes signals like how many times people have interacted with that person in the past few weeks.
    Your activity. This helps us understand what you might be interested in and includes signals such as how many posts you’ve liked.
    Your history of interacting with someone. This gives us a sense of how interested you are generally in seeing posts from a particular person. An example is whether or not you comment on each other’s posts.

    Reply
  30. Tomi Engdahl says:

    Karissa Bell / Engadget:
    Facebook and Instagram will now reward influencers with cash bonuses for hitting certain milestones, like selling a set number of badges in an Instagram stream — new tools to help its creators earn more money from the platform. At its first Creator Week event, Mark Zuckerberg introduced …

    Facebook offers ‘extra cash’ for creators who stream more
    Instagram will also introduce tools for influencers to earn affiliate commission from po
    https://www.engadget.com/instagram-creators-challenges-affiliate-commission-193917455.html

    Instagram is working on new tools to help its creators earn more money from the platform. At its first Creator Week event, Mark Zuckerberg introduced new features that will help influencers to earn “extra cash” for meeting specific goals.

    With the new program influencers can earn additional payouts “for hitting certain milestones.” On Instagram, creators can earn “bonuses” by selling a set number of badges within their streams, or streaming with another account. On Facebook, the bonuses will come via “Stars Challenges,” which rewards creators for meeting streaming goals and completing other set tasks.

    Besides boosting revenue for creators, the new challenges could also incentivize influencers to spend more time creating content for their fans on Instagram and Facebook compared with other platforms. “We believe that you should be rewarded for the value that you bring to your fans and to the overall community,” Zuckerberg said during the event.

    Finally, Instagram is allowing creators who already sell their own products to link their existing storefronts to their Instagram profiles. Zuckerberg had previously teased the “creator shops” feature, but it’s now rolling out to creators.

    Reply
  31. Tomi Engdahl says:

    Meaghan Tobin / Rest of World:
    Facebook says it fixed a proxy error in its Discover app after researchers found it removed images from other websites more frequently than Facebook’s services

    How Facebook Discover replicated many of Free Basics’ mistakes
    https://restofworld.org/2021/facebook-connectivity-discover/

    Researchers found the new connectivity app favored Facebook’s own products. The company said it fixed the issue after Rest of World asked about it.

    Reply
  32. Tomi Engdahl says:

    Thomas Grove / Wall Street Journal:
    Russia has been pressuring social media platforms like YouTube and Twitter to remove anti-government content and police its critics, and it seems to be working

    Russia Puts the Squeeze on Social Media to Police Its Critics
    https://www.wsj.com/articles/russia-puts-the-squeeze-on-social-media-to-police-its-critics-11623144602?mod=djemalertNEWS

    Kremlin uses Twitter and other platforms to advance its goals overseas, but is now trying to prevent its opponents from using the same tools

    MOSCOW—Russia’s government was quick to use social media when it tried to steer the course of U.S. elections, American officials say. It isn’t quite as eager to see its own opponents at home try the same thing.

    Ahead of a parliamentary vote later this year, the Kremlin has been fine-tuning its strategy to pressure platforms such as Twitter, YouTube and TikTok to remove antigovernment content, classifying a growing number of posts as illegal and issuing a flurry of takedown requests.

    So far it appears to be working. The Western-dominated tech giants have in many instances complied. YouTube temporarily removed links to content laying out the opposition’s voting strategy. Russian officials say Twitter is working to comply with requests to remove content that Moscow deems illegal. TikTok, owned by China’s ByteDance Ltd., also removed or altered a handful of videos that criticized the government and promoted opposition street protests.

    TikTok, Twitter and Google, the Alphabet Inc. subsidiary that owns YouTube, say they decide whether to delete content based on local laws where they operate and on their own internal guidelines. None of the companies commented on specific cases mentioned in this article.

    Reply
  33. Tomi Engdahl says:

    Cecilia D’Anastasio / Wired:
    As Twitch turns 10, a look at how the service pioneered the patronage system that is prevalent across the internet’s creator economy today
    https://www.wired.com/story/twitch-turns-10-creator-economy/

    Reply
  34. Tomi Engdahl says:

    Casey Newton / Platformer:
    Ad-supported and subscription-only newsletters both have ways to understand audiences without the tracking pixels blocked by Apple’s Mail Privacy Protection — How Mail Protection Privacy will force the email economy to adapt — Today, let’s talk about one of Apple’s many announcements …

    Will Apple Mail threaten the newsletter boom?
    How Mail Protection Privacy will force the email economy to adapt
    https://www.platformer.news/p/will-apple-mail-end-the-newsletter

    Today, let’s talk about one of Apple’s many announcements this week at its Worldwide Developer Conference, which some see as a possible threat to the rise of journalism distributed by email. If that sounds self-indulgent, given that it’s coming from a journalist who distributes his work via email, I apologize. But it touches on so many of the subjects of interest to us here — a tech giant’s ability to reshape markets to its liking; how journalism will navigate the platform era; what we mean when we talk about privacy — that I hope I can pique your interest at least a little.

    Reply
  35. Tomi Engdahl says:

    Joshua Benton / Nieman Lab:
    Apple’s changes to notifications on phones and the addition of Mail Privacy Protection could hurt publishers, including solo newsletter publishers on Substack

    A packed set of Apple announcements could have big impacts on news publishers — for good and for ill
    https://www.niemanlab.org/2021/06/a-packed-set-of-apple-announcements-could-have-big-impacts-on-news-publishers-for-good-and-for-ill/

    The news alerts you send to iPhones might be about to disappear from your users’ screens. The bedrock metric of the newsletter business just got murdered. (But there’s good news, too.)

    Reply
  36. Tomi Engdahl says:

    Browser Developer Tools Tutorial: 10+ Tricks You Must Know
    https://torquemag.io/2020/06/browser-developer-tools-tutorial/

    If you are not yet familiar with browser developer tools, they are one of the most useful things for anyone tinkering with websites – be it as an owner, enthusiast, ongoing developer, or else.

    Developer tools or dev tools can tell you a lot about any website, such as CSS markup and JavaScript errors. In addition, they allow you to test drive front-end changes, check you site’s responsive design, and even optimize its performance.

    Reply
  37. Tomi Engdahl says:

    Browser Developer Tools Tutorial: 10+ Tricks You Must Know
    https://torquemag.io/2020/06/browser-developer-tools-tutorial/

    If you are not yet familiar with browser developer tools, they are one of the most useful things for anyone tinkering with websites – be it as an owner, enthusiast, ongoing developer, or else.

    Reply
  38. Tomi Engdahl says:

    Mistä tunnistat uskottavat verkkosivut?
    https://www.digimarkkinointi.fi/blogi/mista-tunnistat-uskottavat-verkkosivut

    Verkkosivuston uskottavuus, ensimmäisenä itselleni termistä tulee mieleen klassikkosanonta ”älä usko kaikkea mitä internetissä sanotaan”.

    Reply
  39. Tomi Engdahl says:

    KUUKAUDEN NETTIENKELI ON THE POLITE TYPE – FONTTI, JOKA OPETTAA KIRJOITTAMAAN ASIALLISESTI NETISSÄ
    https://www.mysafety.fi/lehdistohuone/kuukauden-nettienkeli-polite-type-fontti-joka-opettaa-kirjoittamaan-asiallisesti

    Reply

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