The rationale of the legendarily foul mouthed Paul Dacre and
his obedient hackery is that anything in the public sector is by definition
bad, and to be ridiculed. Any thought of treating such bodies on their merits
cannot by definition enter, as they cannot have any. So a public sector
resource winning an award must be attacked, however flimsy the pretext. The
latest example is the gov.uk website.
This site has one objective: to allow access to information
about the Government and the services it provides. A deliberate decision was
made at the outset to provide clarity of presentation and plain English
signposting and information. This it does. The design has led to gov.uk being
awarded the Design
Museum’s Design Of The Year award.
A Mail hatchet job could not be far
away.
“And
the award goes to boring.com! Government website beats off 100 others to be
named world's best design” whines the headline, with the sub-heading
explaining “Basic-looking site features
links to pages like ‘Housing and local services’”. Yeah, all that public
money thrown at it and not one surreptitiously snapped shot of Kim Kardashian
falling out of a car. What’s the world coming to, eh?
“It has only two small
pictures – of the Cabinet Office and of a couple outside a house to promote an
energy scheme”. Terrible, eh? No Helen Flanagan, no Beyonce, no Frankie
Essex, no Gwyneth Paltrow, no Jennifer Aniston. Never mind, tell us about, oh I
dunno, typefaces. “The font used on the
site is Gill Sans”. I wouldn’t be so sure about that, folks.
For starters, you just quoted museum director Deyan Sudjic
telling “Gov.uk looks elegant and subtly
British thanks to a revised version of a classic typeface, designed by Margaret
Calvert back in the 1960s”. Gill Sans was designed by Eric Gill and
first appeared in 1926, becoming nationally known when it was adopted by
the London and North Eastern Railway in 1929. Gill died in 1940.
What won gov.uk the award has clearly been lost on the Mail, and it is not hard to see why: Mail Online is appallingly designed,
there is no discernible ordering of the articles, it is by definition riddled
with falsehood and misinformation, the content is switched around with
confusing regularity, and the only redeeming feature is that the search
facility is better than for many competitors.
Where gov.uk directs readers logically towards
well-structured and clearly presented information, Mail Online doesn’t give a stuff about how punters navigate the
site as long as they visit, and visit often, many drawn in by the click-bait of
the notorious “sidebar of shame”, a
feature they nicked from the original US Huffington
Post site. Mail Online is
reminiscent of Number 6’s riposte in The
Prisoner.
“Information? You won’t
get it!” No, not even by hook or by crook, it seems.
2 comments:
The acknowledgment for gov.uk is a serious defeat for outsourcing. The idea that by default private enterprise will be better and more efficient -- I explain here.
P'd myself that a newspaper decided to talk fonts and got it wrong. Bring back typesetters, they would know their Gill Sans from their New Transport (the .gov font).
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