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Featured Columnists
- Faruk Ateş
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Andy Clarke
- Creating Inspired Design Part 1: I Am The Walrus
- Creating Inspired Design: Part 2: A Day In The Life
- Creating Inspired Design Part 3: You Never Give Me Your Money
- Creating Inspired Design Part 4: Yellow Submarine
- Creating Inspired Design: Part 5: We Can Work It Out
- Creating Inspired Design: Part 6: Across the Universe
- Microformats: The Fine Art of Markup
- Microformats: The Fine Art of Markup: hCard
- Microformats: The Art of Markup: hCalendar
- Microformats: The Fine Art of Markup: hReview
- Microformats: The Fine Art of Markup: hAtom
- Kris Hadlock
- Robert Hoekman, Jr.
- Molly Holzschlag
- Sarah Horton
- Miraz Jordan
- Jonathan and Lisa Price
- Catherine Seda
- Dave Shea
- Dave Taylor
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Table of Contents
- Welcome
- Web Basics
- Publishing on the Web: Putting Files on the Server
- Web Design Process and Workflow
- Project Management
- Mark My WWWord: HTML and XHTML
- Standards Compliance
- Layouts
- Forms
- Meta Tags and Search
- Usability
- Accessibility
- Enhancing Web Page Interaction
- Web Graphics
- Web Page Optimization
- Multimedia
- Content
- Overview of Servers
- Server Programming Basics
- Careers in Web Design
- Tools
- Tutorials
- Intellectual Property for Web Designers
Andy Clarke
Last updated Oct 17, 2003.
Andy Clarke has been working on the web for almost 10 years. He is a visual web designer based in the UK and started his design consultancy Stuff and Nonsense in 1998. As lead designer and creative director, his clients include local and national businesses, charities, and government bodies and he has designed for The British Heart Foundation, Disney Store UK, Save The Children, and WWF UK.
Andy is a member of the Web Standards Project where he redesigned the organization’s web site in 2006. He is also an Invited Expert to the W3C's CSS Working Group. Andy regularly educates web designers on how to create beautiful, accessible web sites and he speaks at workshops and conference events worldwide. He writes about design and popular culture on his blog, All That Malarkey and is the author of Transcending CSS: The Fine Art of Web Design.
