This link has been bookmarked by 13 people . It was first bookmarked on 09 Apr 2007, by Damon Flowers.
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10 Jan 12
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02 Feb 11
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11 Nov 10
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This means that, at the start, you ignore the extremities: the navigation/tabs, footer, colors, sidebar, logo, etc. Instead, you start at the epicenter and design the most important piece of content first.
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Only when that unit is complete would you begin to think about the second most critical element on the page.
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Then after the second most critical element, you'd move on to the third, and so on. That's epicenter design.
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Epicenter design eschews the traditional "let's build the frame then drop the content in" model
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Epicenter design flips that process and allows you to focus on what really matters on day one.
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20 Sep 10
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23 Jun 10
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at the start, you ignore the extremities: the navigation/tabs, footer, colors, sidebar, logo, etc. Instead, you start at the epicenter and design the most important piece of content first.
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Whatever the page absolutely can't live without is the epicenter.
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the second most critical element on the page.
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traditional "let's build the frame then drop the content in" model.
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a more friendly, focused, usable screen for customers
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12 Aug 08
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This means that, at the start, you ignore the extremities: the navigation/tabs, footer, colors, sidebar, logo, etc. Instead, you start at the epicenter and design the most important piece of content first.
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