In support of a less cluttered screen
by gabriela on 7/06/2010These past few days have been rather depressing. We feel this way for two reasons:
- We live in an online world that needs a plug-in like Readability to make it bearable.
- A divisive but exciting conversation thread powered by iA Oliver Reichenstein‘s image titled “3-5 words per line, just to make it look like paper? No NYT, this is NOT how it’s done”. Well done!
Readability (the service)
Readability, which you probably already know, is a free button for your Web browser’s toolbar that eliminates everything from the Web page you’re reading except the text and photos. You can get the button at the arc90 website. The idea is great. Nobody has said it better than NYT’s David Pogue:
Readability makes the world online a calmer, cleaner, more beautiful place.
But shouldn’t this make us happy? Well, let’s just say that we couldn’t agree more with yewknee‘s view on Ryan Catbird’s tumblr:
Very cool, excellent product, but I can’t help but think of how fucked up it is that this thing even needs to exist. Because here’s a novel idea: Hey Publishers: How about you just stop putting shit all over every single pixel on the screen?
Read the entire comment here.
Here’s a peek of how Readability works using an article from the NYT Young Americans Embrace Rigors of the Bolshoi (and this newspaper is far from being the most cluttered one out there):
Before Readability

After Readability

So what has Readability done?
- kept the photo that illustrated the article
- got rid of all the mess surrounding it
- changed column width
- increased interspacing
So simple! And now you can even change your settings so that you can see links as footnotes. Here’s a demo in video:
All in all the design blogosphere has been kind of hectic recently. Perhaps the iPad has something to do with this. Javier Cañada (@javiercanada) tweeted a few days ago:
iPad means extreme segregation between good and bad designers. Those who don’t embrace true simplicity will fail miserably.
A great conversation on information design…
… taking place on the less expected place: flickr. This interesting discussion on information design and presenting online content had input from Khoi Vinh, Lukas Mathis, Wired Magazine, Adobe and Hoefler+Frere-Jones where the following topics were discussed:
- legibility Vs. ‘a look’
- replicating print
- scrolling Vs. screen to screen
- eye-scanning
- columns
iA has a great image in their Wired app article showing what a mess columns can actually be (look at all the zig-zagging going on):

Even though we’ve grown accustomed to reading this way, it doesn’t mean it’s the best way. It’d be kind of sad to realize that we arrived to the best solution back in the 1600′s.
A few days ago we read this tweet from @Gatada :
If you combine Readability with Instapaper you’re all set; enjoyable reading by your desk and on the move! + Don’t forget Dropbox for files.
He’s right. But we hate to conform.
Here’s Vostok’s take on the matter: a list of things that should ALWAYS be taken into account when thinking about online design:
- are you mimicking print? why? if nostalgia is the answer: forget it.
- are you drawing a clear distinction between ads and content?
- are you taking care of line spacing and line length? what works best for what medium?
- are you using columns? why? and how?
- are you understanding and respecting the medium you are designing for? are you making the most out of its possibilities?
- are you trying to fit the same amount of content of a 22-inch broadsheet into a 9-inch iPad screen?
Yeah, these are the ones for us. Are there any others we’ve missed out?
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