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The Dulin Report

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Should today’s developers worry about AI code generators taking their jobs? Dec 11, 2022 Book review: Clojure for the Brave and True Oct 2, 2022 Stop Shakespearizing Sep 16, 2022 Using GNU Make with JavaScript and Node.js to build AWS Lambda functions Sep 4, 2022 Monolithic repository vs a monolith Aug 23, 2022 Scripting languages are tools for tying APIs together, not building complex systems Jun 8, 2022 Good developers can pick up new programming languages Jun 3, 2022 There is no such thing as one grand unified full-stack programming language May 27, 2022 TypeScript is a productivity problem in and of itself Apr 20, 2022 Tools of the craft Dec 18, 2021 Node.js and Lambda deployment size restrictions Mar 1, 2021 What programming language to use for a brand new project? Feb 18, 2020 Using Markov Chain Generator to create Donald Trump's state of union speech Jan 20, 2019 The religion of JavaScript Nov 26, 2018 TypeScript starts where JavaScript leaves off Aug 2, 2017 Node.js is a perfect enterprise application platform Jul 30, 2017 Copyright in the 21st century or how "IT Gurus of Atlanta" plagiarized my and other's articles Mar 21, 2017 Collaborative work in the cloud: what I learned teaching my daughter how to code Dec 10, 2016 Amazon Alexa is eating the retailers alive Jun 22, 2016 JavaScript as the language of the cloud Feb 20, 2016 What Every College Computer Science Freshman Should Know Aug 14, 2015 The Three Myths About JavaScript Simplicity Jul 10, 2015 Big Data is not all about Hadoop May 30, 2015 How We Overcomplicated Web Design Oct 8, 2014

How We Overcomplicated Web Design

October 8, 2014

I started using the Internet in the early 1990s. In those days, other than BBS systems, Compuserve, AOL, and Prodigy, you could get yourself a cheap Unix shell account you could dial into. Neither of those services required much bandwidth.



In fact, the first internet navigation tool that I have used was Gopher. It was a hierarchical menu driven system for searching and browsing mostly academic library catalogs. For all its flaws one thing was true about Gopher - it worked on practically any device, any operating system, and was lightning fast.



Then came the Web. Early HTML allowed simple formatting, some images, some tables, but the point here too is that as originally intended Hypertext Markup Language pages could be loaded on any screen size, any machine, any operating system. No images ? No problem.



Over the past 20 years, however, we invented CSS, JavaScript, Flash, Java, HTML5. Now every web site is an application in and of itself, with its own navigation UX and responsive design. Lo and behold we get so called "Reader" view on smartphones that essentially disables all the bells and whistles and takes us back to the basics of mid 1990s Mosaic browser.



I really wish we could go back to the basics and back to the goal of making information as accessible to everyone as the inventors of the Internet had intended. No value is gained, no new information is presented by having a complex user interface with touch sensitive navigation. Simple text with hyperlinks is all that is needed.