▲ | evilduck 2 days ago | |||||||
That's conflating content and design. Also, where else are these expectations in society? I think accessible websites are important for equitable access to content, services and tools for those with disabilities, but nobody provides "content only" designs for concert posters where the user is expected to create their own art around it. Nobody who is making a movie supplies the script as the only creative output for the market. Nobody dumps a plaintext unformatted version of a book or research paper expecting you to format it yourself. Nobody creates a comic book which consists only the speech bubbles. Nobody should be expected to produce web sites that are just content. | ||||||||
▲ | titzer 2 days ago | parent [-] | |||||||
It's interesting that you provide movie posters as an example. That's literally advertising. At some point the web evolved from being a simple text-based document format to becoming animated, linkable magazines and an endless barrage of advertising. It evolved to look pretty to entertain and entice people, not to inform them. > Nobody dumps a plaintext unformatted version of a book or research paper expecting you to format it yourself. Have you read a novel? It's just text in paragraphs. > Nobody should be expected to produce web sites that are just content. I think you're taking an extreme viewpoint. Have a look at all the markdown on GitHub. Clearly markdown is great for a lot of content. It isn't great for a lot of marketing. | ||||||||
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