One of the great pleasures of the end of the year is all of the entertaining big-think pieces in the newspaper. It's cold, you're not working and all there is to do is go through the paper. Year-end journalism season kicked off today with the New York Times Magazine's annual "Year in Ideas" compilation. Although I don't read the paper on paper unless I'm on the road, I still prefer to read the Year in Ideas on paper because the Times website divides all the two-or-three paragraph blurbs into separate pages. You can't even easily click from one to the next - every time you want to get to another piece, you have to go back to the main page and find the next one unless you notice the tiny "next article in the magazine" link at the bottom.
Even worse is Tbogg, a blog that moved to the Firedoglake server and became completely unreadable. Back on Blogspot, every item could be read from beginning to end on the main page. Now, none of them can. I understand that more clicks mean more ads mean more money, but you get no pageviews from me if your site is too much of a pain to read.
We've had the web for close to two decades now. Blogs have been big for more than five years. Why can't web designers reliably get it right?
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