Web Site Review #3b
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Benjamin Melançon
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Presidential Campaigns: George W. Bush
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Topic
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Republican nominee for president of the United
States of America, George Walker Bush, has a website, the George
W. Bush for President Official Site, about why he should be elected
and how the user can help. [Note of some interest: the text used for the
link to www.georgewbush.com in this paragraph is the title of the site, as displayed
at the top of the browser on some of the sites pages, but many pages at
the site are untitled including the main page.]
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Purpose
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The site clearly exists in order to help elect Bush to the presidency.
The strategy used in trying to obtain this goal often seems to be to convince
people that Gore is worse than Bush rather than that Bush is desirable in
any way, except that he will single-handedly usher in the age of responsibility.
Consider that unsolicited comment part of the discussion on the sites
content.
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Source
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They tell you who is responsible for the
site at the bottom of every page: Paid for by Bush-Cheney 2000, Inc.
Who this really is is not explained at the site. The closest one can get
is the page telling you how you can subvert campaign finance laws by giving
money to the campaign’s General Election Legal and Accounting Compliance
Committee (GELAC).
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Target Audience
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The site almost has a split personality in
trying to direct itself at two very different types of users: diehard supporters
(for example, people who would want to download
Bush paraphenalia and might even put Bush wallpaper
on their computer) and actual humans trying to decide for whom to vote (people
who might want to read the Bush campaigns Blueprint
for the Middle Class).
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Content
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The Bush site contains information on the campaigns stand on the issues,
information on how to circumvent campaign finance laws and contribute to the
campaign, and press releases about the Bush campaign (positive ones) and the
Gore campaign (negative ones). Press releases or press-releasy type
things dominate the content of the site, particularly the content most readily
available. There is still a reasonable amount on the issues, although
specifics are mostly avoided, and somewhat less on how to get involved.
Interactivity: Im going to say none. The closest the Bush
campaigns site gets to accepting input from the user is to not actually
reject getting e-mail. After trying to divert people to e-mail
the state campaigns instead through the persuasive use of exclamation marks,
the user gets the following warm words of encouragement: Thank you for
your interest in contacting the Bush-Cheney 2000 Campaign. Your correspondence
is appreciated.
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Site Plan & Navigation
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The opening screen contains a minimum of content, instead providing a number
of links to the content. The organization of the content is far from
examplary. At one point they tell you that
At the top left corner of the Bush site, it says download. Download
what? I don't see any way to find out without clicking on the link.
This becomes a common problem on the site.
The opening page has no content, as mentioned, and is instead navigation.
Ultimately, the result is that there are multiple links for everything.
On the main page there are four ways to get to the voter
registration page, three ways to get to the volunteer
sign-up page under two different names, three ways to get to the sign-up
page for the Bush
News e-train (if your gonna use train imagery, pal, youd
better fund public transportation), and at least two ways each to get to the
downloads
page, to change the page to Spanish, get to GwBTV, use the tax calculator,
go to state sites (under two different names), and just about everything else.
An interesting fact is that the least content has the most links. About
the only things not available through multiple links are Bushs biographical
information and the Issue Breakdown. Its eery.
The "Issues" link takes the user to an unnecessary intermediary screen that
includes both a general (or 'themeless') "FAQ" and what a person who clicked
on the link probably wanted in the first place: the "Issue Breakdown."
Once inside the Issue Breakdown section, the list of issues is
displayed, some with one paragraph sort of giving Bushs position and
some without. All, however, can be clicked on for more information.
This way of accessing the issues is far inferior to the Gore campaign sites,
where one or, depending on the way you count, two clicks separates you from
your issue of choice. To get to a Bush issue a user must click on Issues,
select Issue Breakdown from the pop-up list, and more likely than
not scroll down the randomly ordered page of issues to find any specific one.
If you click on an issue for more information, the navigation within a particular
Issue is limited to going Back to where you were.
It has a button at the bottom of each which simply uses JavaScript to activate
the Back capability of your browser.
One feature central to the navigation of the site is the pop-up menus for
the primary site navigation down the left side. In one case this feature
really is a navigational aid, wherein the user can surmise that the information
available under the heading Bush-Cheney 2000 is probably personal
information about the candidates and their families since the sub-headings
are George and Laura and Dick and Lynne. Usually
it is not supplying more information about where the link takes the user but
instead presenting more unexplained options. When the user goes to click
on Get involved and is presented with nine menu options instead,
or goes to click on News & Info and gets six choices, what
are they really expected to do? A functionality issue with this
navigation feature (aside from the problem of it not working at all in older
browsers) is that it is apparently graphical, and on larger screens it becomes
very small because it is pixel-based, while text stays slightly larger.
States: When you go to a state site, the sidebar still takes the user
to sections of the main site, but it looks different. Even though
visual continuity has been lost, the user is expected to know that clicking
on "Issues," for example, will take her to the the same national issues page
she may have already visited and not to a page on Florida's issues.
Visiting the Youth
Zone comepletely dissociates the user from the regular navigation.
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Links
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Nearly no links to anywhere in the outside
Web world. Even if you count The
Bush Store, a separate site maintained by Spalding (The Republican
Source · We Elect Republicans
the Campaign-Sanctioned George W.
Bush for President Political Materials Web Site), as a link, and the offer
to register
to vote at election.com
as another, there are only two.
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Page Design
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The page does not expand (or contract) to fit the screens width. One
must conclude that it, like Al Gores site, has been optimized for 800
by 600 screens and nobody else.
The navigation could take up overwhelming amounts of the page, largely because
of blank space in and repeated links, but much of it would go away in certain
content areas, such as "Issues."
The page has a lot of blank space that does not contribute to readability
or even really to asthetics.
The only really, completely, and utterly useless thing on the page was this:
Always near the top, always doing nothing.
Page design, as mentioned, was not even close to consistent throughout the
site. The third column disappeared in most sections and everything changed
for the states and the youth zone.
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Creativity
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The color scheme of the main page at the
Bush for President site is black, yellow, and blue, of the exact shades shown
here:
Do you have any idea how creative this is for a political campaign site?
Its indescribably creative. Unfortunately, after such promise, the
innovative color scheme is squandered. The logo for Bush-Cheney is exactly
that creative (Bush-Cheney) in its text, which is to be expected, and the color
scheme is straight red, white, and blue. Nor is the layout imaginative.
This layout and colors scheme is the only logo in use.
The
main page displayed this GIF, embedded in a picture of the candidates. |
Available
for download were JPEGs of various sizes, including this one. |
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Functionality
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Download Speed: www.georgewbush.com took fourteen seconds to display
its content (test was conducted with the Opera browser and
an ethernet connection). Considering that this was with just
about the fastest connection available the time it took is nearly unacceptable.
The sum total size of the files involved with displaying the opening page
is 194 kilobytes.
Browser Compatibility:
- Netscape 4.73 - displays fine.
- Internet Explorer 5 - displays fine.
- Opera 4.02 - displays fine.
- Mosaic 3.0 and Lynx - the browser gets directed to a text only page which
is moderately ugly in any browser. I would link to the text
only page, but I can't. You have to make sure that your browser
accepts cookies, go to the main
site, and click on the text only link
Post to form insecurely? Submit warning: This form is being submitted
without encryption. Do you want to continue? These are warnings given
by the Opera browser when simply choosing a voter outreach group or state
to go to. I think that most browsers will only display this type of warning
if you tell them to, but it is apparently unnecessary to have this mildly
disturbing message ever appear, because the Gore site used forms and the warning
never appeared while using the same browser.
Another thing about the forms on the Bush site were that they required an
extra step to get to the places named in them. This might really be
more a question of user style than anything. I found it annoying to
have to click on a little arrow graphic, ,
whenever I wanted to actually go where I had already selected through a form
(such as the Language
English | Spanish form). I suppose
it is possible that some people would prefer not to jump straight to the menu
item they choose but have a chance to select a different one, but I am going
to go with my preference and fault the Bush site for inserting an extraneous
step.
The site flings cookies at the user like theres no tomorrow to do the
flinging. Much worse, many functions of the site do not work without
cookies. Changing it to Spanish, for example, requires using cookies,
as does changing it to text only, and using the video at GWBtv.
Even the quiz uses cookies, in a negative fashion if you have cookies
enabled and you get a wrong answer, it will inform you that you cannot try
the quiz more than once a day. Personally, I become uncomfortable when
a web page tries to be so controlling. I deleted the cookie files from
my hard drive and tried another answer on the senseless quiz. And you
need cookies enabled to have a fighting chance of preventing the pop-up window
from recurring. Speaking of which
Pop up windows are annoying. Anyone will tell you this. They
are particularly annoying when, inevitably, George W.s included, they
appear half a second or so after the regular page finally loads.
Sometimes, a lot more than once, the page did not load. This was most
interesting when the sites own automatic refresh would reload the page
without asking and then not come back, hiding this message underneath its
blackness:
Microsoft OLE DB Provider for SQL Server error '80004005' [DBMSSOCN]
General network error. Check your network documentation. /Helper/SiteFunctions.asp,
line 1477
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Unique Features
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A Daily Trivia section at the
bottom of the main page that seems to trend towards inane questions about the
Republican candidates for president and vice-president. For all wrong
answers it send the user to a screen with the cryptic message: No such
Daily Trivia item. For correct answers it tries to get users to
give out their contact infromation. |
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E-mail: melancon@student.umass.edu |
©2000 September 24 ·
beMWeb
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