http://www.brucemartin.net/cayenne/
It achieves a few things: * reduce the size of the left menu to not make it overwhelming* increase the size of the left menu to give more choices (especially as we add version 3.1, 4,0, etc) * continue to have a site which degrades gracefully for old browsers, lynx, etc. and also for accessibility
* conform to w3c standards * make the introductory text snappier and more appealing * give the news more prominence * give the wordy Apache disclaimer less prominence (but still there)* continue to have absolutely simple and clear html suitable for any future restyling (please look at the html before even contemplating any complaint about Javascript not working on your Amiga internet browser).
Most importantly I believe the navigation is easy to use: it doesn't force a user to click through many pages hunting for things. For example, right from the front page it is clear that there is a separate user guide for each of 1.2, 2.0 and 3.0. It makes it clear which versions are stable and which are in development. It provides a simple entry point for new users: "why Cayenne?" and "getting started". It makes it quick for experienced users to go right to the appropriate JavaDocs.
Over the next week I'll be experimenting on how to get this working from within the Confluence wiki system. I'll report back on that progress.
Ari Maniatis --------------------------> ish http://www.ish.com.au Level 1, 30 Wilson Street Newtown 2042 Australia phone +61 2 9550 5001 fax +61 2 9550 4001 GPG fingerprint CBFB 84B4 738D 4E87 5E5C 5EFA EF6A 7D2E 3E49 102A
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