Design reigned supreme in the 20th century, when it was
Message and presentation were inextricably intertwined, with the latter lending power, impact and even meaning to the former. Not for nothing was Marshall McLuhan able to say, with gnomic brevity but not a little insight, “the medium is the message.”
Web designers are leading the charge in this wave, just as they have in the first two major waves of web innovation
But in the 21st century, internet standards have successfully separated design and content. The two live more interdependent lives, sometimes tightly tied and sometimes completely separated from one another.
The message is now free from the medium.
In fact, it’s possible not just for publishers, but for readers and viewers to recast the message into new media, stripping it of its former context and reformatting, republishing, and reframing it at will.
Don’t like the way your book is laid out or the formats it comes in? There’s software that will convert your book into whatever format you want. Oh, you meant a paper book? No problem, you can easily digitize that too.
Looking at an ugly web page? Click one button and it will become instantly more readable, thanks to an aptly-named JavaScript utility called Readability.
And while that’s a difficult thing to accept for those of us who have spent our careers creating publications that weave content and its presentation together into seamless, beautiful packages, it’s a trend that is only getting started.
Authors: Dylan Tweney