Online Marketing Services
Tips and Resources for Web Page Developers
Working on developing a web page? Much of the help you need is at your fingertips. Here are some of the Hass online marketing team and Virtual Web Team members' favorite web development sites.
- Help with HTML
- Web design tips and tools
- Help with Image Maps
- Adding Fonts and Features to Your Web Page
- Programming Tips, Applets and Source Code
- About the Internet
Use these links to learn about HTML: how it works and how to add the interesting stuff, like counters and image maps, that can help any page look great.
- A
Beginner's Guide to HTML
All the HTML basics in an easy-to-use format. - How
do they do that with HTML?
More advanced HTML help - from counters to frames to cookies to GIF animations (lots of other links, too). - A Bare Bones Guide
to HTML
This guide is only "bare bones" in that it doesn't give much of a tutorial itself, but it does have many links to other, more comprehensive pages on a wide variety of topics. - So you want
to make a web page!
Discovered by Stephanie Tibbetts, one of our most dexterous page editors, this is a very user-friendly guide. - HTML 4.0 Specification
Information from the World Wide Web Consortium. - HTML
Tag Guide
Every tag you could ever need. - Bobby
This is a great free service that lets you test your HTML code for browser compatibility, accessibility for the disabled, and more.
These guides will tell you how to have one of the best pages on the internet. Use them to learn how to set up a professional, clean page that people will not only enjoy visiting, but will also find useful.
Here are some guides and tips developed by your colleagues at UC Berkeley.
- UC Berkeley's Web Design Guide
- An editor's web tips
- Some tips from Boalt Hall
- Values for browser-safe colors
Here are some links to get you started with your image map (also known as a clickable image).
Adding Fonts and Features to Your Web Page
Use these archive to add extra touches to your Web Page.
Programming Tips, Applets and Source Code
Please note - the use of new PERL or C code on Haas servers must first be approved by the Computer Center.
