Information Architecture for the World Wide Web, Second Edition
by Louis Rosenfeld, Peter Morville
Browser Navigation Features
When designing a navigation system, it is important to consider the environment the system will exist in. On the Web, people use web browsers such as Netscape Navigator and Microsoft Internet Explorer to move around and view web sites. These browsers sport many built-in navigation features.
Open URL allows direct access to any page on a web site. Back and Forward provide a bidirectional backtracking capability. The History menu allows random access to pages visited during the current session, and Bookmark or Favorites enables users to save the location of specific pages for future reference. Web browsers also go beyond the Back button to support a “bread crumbs” feature by color-coding hypertext links. By default, unvisited hypertext links are one color and visited hypertext links are another. This feature helps users see where they have and haven’t been and can help them to retrace their steps through a web site.
Finally, web browsers allow for a prospective view that can influence how users navigate. As the user passes the cursor over a hypertext link, the destination URL appears at the bottom of the browser window, hinting at the nature of that content. A good example is shown in Figure 7-3, where the cursor is positioned over “Catharsis.” The prospective view window at the bottom shows the URL of that blog. If files and directories have been carefully labeled, prospective view gives the user context within the content hierarchy. If the hypertext ...
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