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What Website has the Cleanest Site Design?

Gabe Anast asks: "The recent article on Microsoft's market dominance referred to an article at the International Herald Tribune, which I read until I became engrossed in the natural readability and intuitive interface of that site. It's amazing! I'll have to say that site has the cleanest design of any I have ever used. So, of course, I thought 'What are the other "best designed" sites? Would Slashdot know? My personal criteria for site design is: graphic design/appeal; an intuitive interface; and content that flows naturally (eg: high content density that does not sacrifice clarity). What are your favorite sites, and by what criteria do you judge such?"

9 of 181 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Gripe by missing000 · · Score: 3, Informative

    It's also not a website. W3C can't tell what it is, and a quick look at the source tells me it full of problems, numberone on my list being an extreeme over-use of javascript.

  2. Ha'ayal and Fisheye by epsalon · · Score: 2, Informative

    These Hebrew sites employ a very clean and easy forum system, unseen anywhere else.

  3. Re:Cleanest site design... by ljaguar · · Score: 2, Informative

    Actually, for the longest time, i have been using slashdot in "light" mode (available under one of the preferences).

    It's actually ultra-clean and very light. it's faster to download and render - it's still very usuable under lynx and i have for a while too. And it's pretty color agnostic. as in, just black on white. So give slashdot light a try.

    Basically the table is not a monsterosity and the sidebars are missing. And you don't get the pretty topic icons.

  4. The man knows his html... by crapulent · · Score: 3, Informative

    Come on, the timecube guy is obviously a master at modern UI deign and html layout. :-)

    Seriously though, here are some sites whose design I like:

    Sweetcode

    Mathworld

    openrbl.org

    perldoc

    Paul Borke's website

    the Joel On Software forums

    the Tech Report (a debatable choice, but the best of its type)

    Dmitry's Design Lab

  5. Re:Easy by brendotroy · · Score: 2, Informative

    Or, if you use the toolbar (I know, it's only available to a few OS/browser combos) just type your search terms in and click the "search this site" button while you're on a /. page. Also potentially helpful (and obvious).

    http://toolbar.google.com/

  6. Off the top of my head: by Fweeky · · Score: 2, Informative
    • aagh.net -- degrades gracefully, uses real (X)HTML properly, has clean URL's, simple and clear navigation, plenty of <link>'s, and is one of the few sites I know of that not only serves XHTML as application/xhtml+xml as it should be, but serves HTML 4.01 to clients that don't support it. Yes, it's my site ;)
    • xiven.com -- honourable mention :)
    • diveintomark.org -- aside from the braindead US date format he uses, it rules.
    • DevEdge -- clean, degrades very well.
    • kuro5hin -- Has a nice fresh creamy flavour.
  7. Clean news sites by WIAKywbfatw · · Score: 2, Informative

    Personally, I think that the BBC News and NewsNow sites are both well layed out, work well, etc. Skimming either can be done in seconds and give you a good snapshot of what's going on in the world.

    Drilling down to an area of interest on either site is very clean, quick and easy too.

    --

    "Accept that some days you are the pigeon, and some days you are the statue." - David Brent, Wernham Hogg
  8. webpagesthatsuck.com by schnits0r · · Score: 3, Informative

    They offer tips on how to fix thing and how not to make annoying sites. I find it best to learn by example. They show bad examples so you know what NOT to do.

    http://www.webpagesthatsuck.com

  9. Text-based design by selan · · Score: 2, Informative

    Have a look here for a minimalist, clean approach.