This link has been bookmarked by 14 people . It was first bookmarked on 02 Mar 2009, by Frederik Van Zande.
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Peggy CollinsUsers often see online content out of context and read it with different goals than you envisioned. While you can't predict all such goals, you can plan for multiple uses of your text.
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Users often see online content out of context and read it with different goals
than you envisioned. While you can't predict all such goals, you can plan for
multiple uses of your text.
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Joan Vinall-CoxOn writing on the web. "We know from countless studies of users' reading behavior on websites that people mainly read only the initial part of any piece of content. To read beyond that, users must be convinced of the content's value." via Steve Rubel
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Alexandre Cabanisecific language. Concrete terms are more likely to help people who have a different perspective on the content. Generic or broad terms can be misinterpreted — or overlooked, as we saw in the example.
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Lynne JonesWrite for Reuse Summary: Users often see online content out of context and read it with different goals than you envisioned. While you can't predict all such goals, you can plan for multiple uses of your text.
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Jimmy BreezeUsers often see online content out of context and read it with different goals than you envisioned. While you can't predict all such goals, you can plan for multiple uses of your text.
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Maria ThompsonSummary:
Users often see online content out of context and read it with different goals than you envisioned. While you can't predict all such goals, you can plan for multiple uses of your text. -
Frederik Van ZandeUsers often see online content out of context and read it with different goals than you envisioned. While you can't predict all such goals, you can plan for multiple uses of your text.
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