Dec

1

Creating quick and easy coming soon pages

Capturely makes coming soon pages

Anybody who’s ever launched a new website knows how much trouble it can be to create a simple “coming soon” holding page. Designers can be expensive, and it hardly seems worthwhile setting up the server and hosting for one single page. However Capturely, a new online service, lets users create custom “coming soon” pages in less than 60 seconds!

To begin with you enter a headline and body copy for the page, along with any analytics service you might want to use. Users can then pick a style template from the few available, or choose to adapt their page in real time by tweaking the CSS.

One of the key benefits of Capturely is the ability to launch a “coming soon” page quickly, but with the added benefit of collecting email addresses from visitors you soon gain a pre-launch audience. Capturely also allows you to export this email list to providers like MailChimp.

Capturely is free for use up to a maximum of 20 collected email addresses; after that, it’s USD 0.25 per email.

If you have a registered domain but not yet launched your website Capturely could help you out.

Oct

16

Zoom for detail

Magic Magnify helps uses zoom in for detail

I came across this neat little feature from Magic Toolbox recently and have already recommended it to some clients. Magic Toolbox have a few useful tools but one stood out as the best – that is Magic Magnify and this allows you to roll your mouse over an image and zoom into that area so you can see much greater detail – as if you’re looking through a magnifying glass.

Applications for this feature are widespread but it would be particularly beneficial for eCommerce stores where products have fine and intricate detail that perhaps can’t be seen clearly in a small photo. It’s not only interactive but very engaging and this can only enhance a users experience – always a good sign especially in an eCommerce store!

In order for this to work every image needs two files, one small and one large. In essence the magnification area shows the detail from the large image when you roll your mouse over a section of the small image. Magic Magnify actually uses a Flash plugin for the photo zoom effect but with Flash being a pretty much ubiquitous technology this doesn’t become a usability hurdle. It’s smooth, quick, standards compliant, valid, and accessible.

Added to this it’s easy to add to your website in minutes (with a small piece of JavaScript code). You can customize it to suit your own site design by changing the size, shape and border of the magnifying glass if you wish. there absolutely no need to adjust the Flash file and for only £15 per site license it’s a steal!

Did I mention it’s also free for non-commercial websites!?