updating a website

New Month, New Website

New Month, New Website

gift

Christmas has come early at The Technology Therapy Group!  We finally get to unwrap our shiny, new website, take it out of the box and share it with the world.

Don’t get me wrong, our old website has served us very well since 2007.  That site, our fourth for www.technologytherapy.com, was our most well received and complimented on by users to date.  It still stands as a perfect example of how a great amount of content can be organized into an easy-to-follow, usable format.  But after two years of growing as a business, we began to accumulate more and more content—articles, events, clients, blog posts—until we reached a point where we began feeling a little cramped.

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Does Your Website Look the Same to Everyone?

Does Your Website Look the Same to Everyone?

browsersWhat’s your favorite web browser? On my Apple, I like Safari; however, with the release of Firefox 3, I find myself using that browser more than Safari.

Tom, our designer (also an Apple user) prefers Safari, but he pointed out to me that he likes the newest release of Safari 3.  James, our new HTML / CSS coder, is a fan of the PC and his preference is Firefox 3.  Melissa, our project manager, uses Firefox 3 outside of work, and Theresa prefers Internet Explorer 6 because it works and she has no reason to upgrade.

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Keeping a Website in Frame

Keeping a Website in Frame

toolbarsControlling your website and how it looks from one computer to another is not always an easy task.  Let’s look at some mediums we’re all familiar with:

Television: Commercials, sitcoms, and even movies are all broadcast at a certain standard (525 scan lines at 30 frames per second at an aspect ratio of 4:3) at least until the end of 2009.

Print: Magazines are typically printed at 300 dpi (dots per inch) and the page size is specific to that book, but no matter who picks up the magazine, everyone sees things exactly the same.

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