Washburn Law School Internet Services


Mark Folmsbee, Washburn Law School Library


Web Servers

The WashLaw WEB provides users with links to all known law-related materials on the Internet. Generally speaking, the information is arranged by subject, by location (geographically), and alphabetically. All links on the main WashLaw web menu are maintained by full time staff members. Many pages have full-text searching of local as well as distant resources. Information is added on a daily basis.

Washburn also hosts a large number of law-related Listserv discussion groups. Users can access the archives of those listservs, as well other legal discussion groups and mailing lists at this web site. The WashLaw web "starting point" is at: http://lawlib.wuacc.edu/washlaw/washlaw.html.

The law library also hosts several non-law sites:

City of Topeka Web (Official):
http://lawlib.wuacc.edu/topeka/topeka.html
Listserv: topeka@ftplaw.wuacc.edu

Treasures of the Czars
http://lawlib.wuacc.edu/czars/czars.html
Listserv: czars@ftplaw.wuacc.edu

All Washburn Law School Internet services are free. To facilitate continued growth, the Law School is always seeking partnership opportunities with organizations that have similar interests. Contact Mark Folmsbee, zzfolm@acc.wuacc.edu for details.


Highlights of WashLaw WEB include:

Directories
http://lawlib.wuacc.edu/washlaw/directry/directry.html
Includes connections to more than 50 legal directories and covers law schools, law firms, and law-related organizations.

Federal Law and Government Documents - DocLaw
http://lawlib.wuacc.edu/washlaw/doclaw/doclaw5m.html
Provides access to all known federal law in the United States as well as law related government document resources. It is arranged by subject and agency and is maintained by Paul Arrigo, zzarri@acc.wuacc.edu.

Foreign and International Law - ForIntLaw
http://lawlib.wuacc.edu/forint/forint3m.html
Provides comprehensive Internet access to foreign, international, and United Nations legal materials. This web site contains links to primary and secondary sources in many countries. The site is maintained by Jie Su, zzsu@acc.wuacc.edu.

Kansas WEB
http://lawlib.wuacc.edu/washlaw/kansas.html
Offers links to Kansas information including historical materials, state colleges and universities, cities, area business information, and entertainment opportunities. The site is maintained by Sylvia Hurla, zzhurl@acc.wuacc.edu.

Law Clinic
http://lawlib.wuacc.edu/Law clinic/lawclinic.html
Provides access to the AALS Section on Clinical Legal Education information, as well as the section newsletter and listserv archives (listserv is Law clinic@lawlib.wuacc.edu created on listserv@lawlib.wuacc.edu).

Law Firms
http://lawlib.wuacc.edu/washlaw/lawfirms.html
A growing list of all law firm web sites. Maintained by Virgie Smith, zzsmiv@acc.wuacc.edu.

Law Journals
http://lawlib.wuacc.edu/washlaw/lawjournal/lawjournal.html
A growing list of all law related electronic law journals. Includes full text searching. Maintained by Carol Crocker, zzcroc@acc.wuacc.edu

Law Library Catalogs
http://lawlib.wuacc.edu/washlaw/lawcat/lawcat.html
Provides connections to over 100 law (or law related) library catalogs. Includes descriptions of special collections, telefax numbers, phone numbers, street addresses, and ariel addresses. Please direct changes, corrections, or additions to Mark Folmsbee, zzfolm@acc.wuacc.edu.

Law Schools and Legal Organizations
http://lawlib.wuacc.edu/washlaw/lawschools.html
A list of all law school and legal organization gopher and web sites. Includes addresses. Please direct changes, corrections, or additions to Mark Folmsbee, zzfolm@acc.wuacc.edu.

Listserv Information and Archives
http://lawlib.wuacc.edu/washlaw/listserv.html
This includes access to all law related listservs maintained at Washburn University School of Law (lawlibdir-l, lawlibref-l, privatelawlib-l, statecourtcountylawlib-l, Law clinic, familylaw-l, lawdeans-l, and many others).

Paralegal Information System - ParaLaw
http://lawlib.wuacc.edu/paralegal/paralegal.html
Provides access to the Washburn Legal Assistant information system. Site is maintained by the Legal Assistants Society, Katherine Anderson, sswlas@sace.wuacc.edu.

State Law, Government, and Legislative Information - StateLaw
http://lawlib.wuacc.edu/washlaw/uslaw/statelaw.html
A comprehensive set of state law links in the United States. This site is maintained by Lloyd Herrera, zzherr@acc.wuacc.edu.

Subject Index/Access (to law related materials)
http://lawlib.wuacc.edu/washlaw/subject/subject.html
Includes links to all law specialty sites and is organized according to the "section" breakdown for the American Association of Law Schools (AALS).

Virtual Law Reference Desk - REFLAW

http://lawlib.wuacc.edu/washlaw/reflaw/reflaw.html
Contains information of interest to professors, law students, and others interested in locating legal reference materials on the Internet. Files include: Professors Choice, Daily News, and Government and International Reference. Functionally this site is like a legal newspaper and is maintained by Lissa Holzhausen, zzholz@acc.wuacc.edu.

Other Legal Information Sites at Washburn

a) NOCALL (Northern California Association of Law Libraries)
http://lawlib.wuacc.edu/nocall/home.html
b) SCALL (Southern California Association of Law Libraries)
http://lawlib.wuacc.edu/scall/home.html
c) AALLNET (The official electronic American Association of Law Libraries information system)
AALLNET includes:

How to access AALLNET
--using vt100/102 terminal emulation:
a) telnet

  1. telnet to lawlib.wuacc.edu
  2. at Login: prompt, type aallnet and press enter
  3. follow instructions on AALLNET menu
b) web site
  1. http://lawlib.wuacc.edu/aallnet/aallnet.html

AALL FTP Site
If you have information about your AALL law related Chapter, Consortium, Association, Committee, Special Interest Section, and do not have a location to make the data available to the Association (or your group) on Internet, feel free to put the data at the AALLNET ftp site. Once the data has been transferred to the ftp site, it can be moved to AALLNET. Please allow 48 hours to make the basic link and set up your web site. Since the data will be loaded as web data, your members will be able to go to it directly. You can update your information by transferring new files to the site, and sending Mark Folmsbee an E-mail note.

How to put data at this site? You will need to use the FTP command. FTP stands for File Transfer Protocol and provides you with a way to transfer data from one computer to another. There are many ftp programs available on Internet; you need to check your site to see which one you use. One example: If you want to transfer a text file (such as a WordPerfect document saved as DOS text), make sure that your document is loaded on your local computer, in the subdirectory where your FTP software is loaded. Be sure that you have named your document using a .txt extension (it is easier to create the automatic update routine using the extension). Example: ftphelp.txt

  1. Type the following command on your computer within the subdirectory that has your FTP software loaded. Type: ftp law.wuacc.edu and press ENTER
  2. Next you will be asked for a username or login: Type: anonymous and press ENTER.
  3. Next you will be asked for a password: Type: youremailaddress and press ENTER.
  4. Now you are connected. Type: put filename.txt and press enter.

THE FILE SHOULD TRANSFER TO THE SITE!

More Advanced commands:
A. How to transfer a file from a specific subdirectory or disk drive (and not "clog" your ftp software directory)?

  1. When you are connected to the ftp site, but before you use the "put" command: Type: lcd c:\wp\doc (for example) and press ENTER -this will cause the "put" command to "look" to the c:\wp\doc subdirectory for your documents.
B. How to transfer an image?
  1. To do this, you must change the transfer setting to "binary". After you are connected to the FTP site, but before you use the "put" command: Type: binary and press ENTER - then use the "put" command to transfer the image.
C. How to transfer many documents (all at once)?
  1. Make sure you have loaded all the documents to be transferred, into a separate subdirectory on your local computer. Then, once you are connected to the FTP site, but before you have used the "put" command: Type prompt and press ENTER.
  2. Then, use the lcd command (above) to direct your ftp software to the particular subdirectory you are interested in.
  3. Then: Type mput *.* or mput *.txt or mput *.gif (as the case may be) and press ENTER.

CAUTION: If you intend to transfer A LOT of data this way, please E-mail me first at zzfolm@acc.wuacc.edu or call me at (913) 231-1010 ext 1041.

Washburn Listservs

To subscribe:

  1. Send a message to: listserv@lawlib.wuacc.edu
  2. Message says: subscribe listname yourname
    Example: subscribe paralegal-l henry rosen

To unsubscribe:

  1. Send a message to: listserv@lawlib.wuacc.edu
  2. Message says: unsubscribe nameoflist
Example: unsubscribe lawlibref-l

Other commands (E-mail messages) sent to the listserv will generate responses below.

Send message to: listserv@lawlib.wuacc.edu

Message: set lawlibref-l mail postpone
Purpose: Stops incoming listserv messages

Message: set lawlibref-l mail ack
Purpose: To resume postponed mail

Message: set lawlibref-l mail digest
Purpose: Digest will contain the postings for a week with summaries listed

Message: recipients
Purpose: Gets you a list of subscribers to the listserv

Listservs (selected) below are all located on/at listserv@lawlib.wuacc.edu, listserv@assocdir.wuacc.edu, listserv@law.wuacc.edu, listservs@hein.wuacc.edu, listserv@cat.wuacc.edu, or ftplaw.wuacc.edu. Contact Mark Folmsbee if you or your group would like to become a partner in a listserv.

AALL Annual Convention: indianapolis96-l@lawlib.wuacc.edu
Washburn Contact: Lib. Mark Folmsbee, zzfolm@acc.wuacc.edu

AALL Public Relations: chapterpr@assocdir.wuacc.edu
Washburn Contact: Lib. Mark Folmsbee, zzfolm@acc.wuacc.edu

AALL Program Chairs: programchairs96-l@law.wuacc.edu
Washburn Contact: Lib. Mark Folmsbee, zzfolm@acc.wuacc.edu

ABA Questionnaire (Partner= ABA, Rick Morgan POC): abaquestionnaire-l@ftplaw.wuacc.edu
Washburn Contact: Prof. Allen Easley, zzeasl@acc.wuacc.edu

ABA Law Student Division (Partner= ABA, LSD): aba-lsd@ftplaw.wuacc.edu
Washburn Contact: Lib. Mark Folmsbee, zzfolm@acc.wuacc.edu

Agricultural Law (Partner= Agricultural Law Center, Arkansas): aglaw-l@lawlib.wuacc.edu
Washburn Contact: Prof. James Wadley, zzwadl@acc.wuacc.edu

Ariel Project Discussion: lawariel-l@lawlib.wuacc.edu
Washburn Contact: Carol Crocker, zzcroc@acc.wuacc.edu

Bio-Ethics Law (Partner= AALS Section on Law, Medicine, Health Care): bioethicslaw-l@lawlib.wuacc.edu
Washburn Contact: Prof. Jalen Oneil, zzonei@acc.wuacc.edu

CaseBase User Discussion: casebase-l@lawlib.wuacc.edu
Washburn Contact: Lib. Paul Arrigo, zzarri@acc.wuacc.edu

Communication Law (Partner= AALS Section on Mass Communication Law): comlaw-l@lawlib.wuacc.edu
Washburn Contact: Prof. Ron Griffin, zzgrif@acc.wuacc.edu

Continuing Legal Education (Partner= Association of Continuing Legal Education, and University of Kentucky School of Law): lawcontinuinged-l@lawlib.wuacc.edu
Washburn Contact: Elsie Lessor, zzless@acc.wuacc.edu

Death Penalty: deathpenalty@assocdir.wuacc.edu
Washburn Contact: Lib. Mark Folmsbee, zzfolm@acc.wuacc.edu

Free Speech: clspeech@ftplaw.wuacc.edu
Prof. Eugene Volokh

Family Law Faculty: familylaw-l@lawlib.wuacc.edu
Washburn Contact: Prof. Linda Elrod, zzelro@acc.wuacc.edu

Health/Legal Issues: healthlaw-l@lawlib.wuacc.edu
Washburn Contact: Lib. Paul Arrigo, zzarri@acc.wuacc.edu

Hein Subscribers (restricted) (Partner= Hein Publishing): hein-subs-l@lawlib.wuacc.edu
Washburn Contact: Lib. Jie Su, zzsu@acc.wuacc.edu

Human Rights Issues (Partner= Notre Dame School of Law, Depaul University School of Law),: humanrights-l@lawlib.wuacc.edu
Washburn Contact: Prof. Ali Khan, zzkhan@acc.wuacc.edu

Intellectual Property: iplawlib-l@law.wuacc.edu
Washburn Contact: Lib. Paul Arrigo, zzarri@acc.wuacc.edu

International Law: forintlaw@law.wuacc.edu
Washburn Contact: Lib. Jie Su, zzsu@acc.wuacc.edu

Jewish Law Professors: jewishlawprof-l@lawlib.wuacc.edu
Washburn Contact: Prof. Bruce Levine, zzlevi@acc.wuacc.edu

Juvenile Law: juvenilelaw-l@lawlib.wuacc.edu
Washburn Contact: Prof. Nancy Maxwell, zzmaxw@acc.wuacc.edu

Kansas Attorneys: kansasattorneys-l@lawlib.wuacc.edu
Washburn Contact: Lib. Paul Arrigo, zzarri@acc.wuacc.edu

Legal Clinic Educators (Partner= AALS Section on Clinical Legal Education),: lawclinic@lawlib.wuacc.edu
Washburn Contact: Prof. Mike Kaye, zzkaye@acc.wuacc.edu

Law Deans (restricted- subscription request to zzfolm@acc.wuacc.edu, Partner= Association of American Law Schools),: lawdeans-l@lawlib.wuacc.edu
Washburn Contact: Dean Jim Concannon, zzeasl@acc.wuacc.edu

Law Firm Administration: lawfirmadmin-l@lawlib.wuacc.edu
Washburn Contact: Lib. Mark Folmsbee, zzfolm@acc.wuacc.edu

Imaging and Electronic Publishing (Partner= University of Pennsylvania): lawimaging-l@acc.wuacc.edu
Washburn Contact: Lib. Mark Folmsbee, zzfolm@acc.wuacc.edu

Legal Employment: lawjobs-l@lawlib.wuacc.edu
Washburn Contact: Elsie Lesser, zzless@acc.wuacc.edu

Law Review/Law Journal: lawjournal-l@lawlib.wuacc.edu
Washburn Contact: Prof. John Kuether, zzkuet@acc.wuacc.edu

Law Library Directors (restricted- subscription request to zzfolm@acc.wuacc.edu): lawlibdir-l@lawlib.wuacc.edu
Washburn Contact: Prof. John Christensen, zzchri@acc.wuacc.edu

Legal Reference: lawlibref-l@lawlib.wuacc.edu
Washburn Contact: Lib. Lissa Holzhausen, zzholz@acc.wuacc.edu

Legal Ethics (Partner= ABA Sci/Tech Section Law and Ethics on Net, and Catholic University School of Law): legalethics-l@lawlib.wuacc.edu
Washburn Contact: Prof. Sheila Reynolds, zzreyn@acc.wuacc.edu

Lexis Users: lexisuser-l@lawlib.wuacc.edu
Washburn Contact: Lloyd Herrera, zzherr@acc.wuacc.edu

Net-Lawyers (List-owner, Lewis Rose): net-lawyers@lawlib.wuacc.edu
Washburn Contact: Lib. Mark Folmsbee, zzfolm@acc.wuacc.edu

Needs and Offers for Library Acquisitions: needsandoffers-l@law.wuacc.edu
Milagro Rush

Newbook notice-Publishers are encouraged to publish notices of new books (Partner= University of North Dakota School of Law): newlawbooks-l@lawlib.wuacc.edu
Washburn Contact: John Bostwick, zzbost@acc.wuacc.edu

National Network of Law School Officers: nnlso@law.wuacc.edu
Washburn Contact: Betty Fischer

Oil and Gas Law: oilgaslaw-l@lawlib.wuacc.edu
Washburn Contact: Prof. David Pierce, zzpirc@acc.wuacc.edu

Patents: patent-l@ftplaw.wuacc.edu
Washburn Contact: Prof. John Christensen, zzchri@acc.wuacc.edu

Poverty Law Discussion (Partner= Loyola New Orleans School of Law),: povertylaw-l@lawlib.wuacc.edu
Washburn Contact: Prof. Lynette Petty, zzpett@acc.wuacc.edu

Prelaw Discussion List: prelaw-students@lawlib.wuacc.edu
Washburn Contact: Janet Kerr, zzkerr@acc.wuacc.edu

Private Law Librarians: privatelawlib-l@lawlib.wuacc.edu
Washburn Contact: Lib. Mark Folmsbee, zzfolm@acc.wuacc.edu

State & County Court Librarians: statecourtcountylawlib-l@lawlib.wuacc.edu
Washburn Contact: Lib. Mark Folmsbee, zzfolm@acc.wuacc.edu

Tailored Solutions Users: tailoredsolutionsuser-l@lawlib.wuacc.edu
Washburn Contact: Richard Barr, zzbarr@acc.wuacc.edu

Westlaw Users: westlawuser-l@lawlib.wuacc.edu
Washburn Contact: Richard Barr, zzbarr@acc.wuacc.edu


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-----------------------------3031172603102 Content-Disposition: form-data; name="file9"; filename="v14n1webdev.html" Content-Type: text/html Automatome, Winter 1996

Washburn Law School Web Development: A Developmental Process


Lloyd Herrera, Washburn Law School


At Washburn Law School we have been running our legal information services web site, WASHLAW for a little more than three and a half years. With the explosion of web sites on the Internet, we decided to develop an additional law school web site. This new site at Washburn highlights selected features of the Law School and Law Library.

The growth of web servers on the Internet has been nothing short of astonishing. Matthew Gray of net.Genesis Corporation (http://www.netgen.com/info/growth.html) compiles growth information on web server statistics and his research shows that in June of 1993, there were 130 web sites, 1.5% of those being commercial web sites, which works out to be 13,000 computers to every one web site; by June 1995 (latest figures available) the number of web sites had grown to 23,500, 31.3% being commercial sites with the ratio of computers to web sites now at a remarkable 270 to 1! There is no question the web services have become the primary form of information delimitation on the Internet.

In the development of our site, the first task was to decide our target audience. Our target audience primarily will be those students interested in attending Washburn Law School. Our secondary targets will be the students already attending. The third targets are our alums and individuals that can provide support and services to our school (donors and legal firms that recruit from Law Schools). The decision concerning how we would deliver the information lead to some spirited discussions among the web development team. Since web services are now the most accessed form on the Internet, the next statistics to look at are which web browsers are most prevalent. The table below ranks' web browsers according to YAHOO usage statistics http://www.cen.uiuc.edu/~ejk/bryl.html:

BROWSERS HOSTS %
1. Netscape 46468 75.9
2. Mosaic 7985 13.0
3. Other 3650 6.0
4. Lynx 3092 5.1

Our discussions initially centered around which browser to support. Developing the web for use by Netscape browsers and their extensions would run the risk of losing individuals with other browsers particularly Lynx (text only browser). Knowing your mission goals will help answer this question. Our audience will be potential students and we want to reach as many as possible. We also need to consider that we want our site to attract viewers; therefore we need to design it to be graphical in order to entice the viewer. With these considerations in mind, we decided that we would develop the site with Netscape enhancements in mind but use version 1.2 enhancements. We can therefore cater to Netscape browsers (ver 1.2 or higher) and yet have the capability to serve other graphical browsers (background, various color commands and other enhancements will be ignored by browsers not capable of utilizing them). We incorporated ALT tags (ALT tags will display a message to text viewers that cannot load graphics) so that Lynx viewers can use our site (later versions of Lynx ver. 2.4.2, show the links inside a table though not the table itself). I must admit that at first we looked into having two separate versions. One graphical and the other text based but as the development progressed, we realized that two separate web sites would be physically challenging to say the least. Rule of thumb would be to go with the largest common denominator but if you can make minor changes to increase viewership, the more the merrier.

Developing a graphical interface spawned spirited debate among our development team. In the past, we developed web sites with limited graphics (buttons mainly). WashLaw is a legal resource service and in that context the need for speed is paramount. A user prefers a rapid delimitation of information and since we link to other sites, (we have no control as to the content or speed of their site), we felt that WashLaw should not add to the responsiveness bottleneck. Our law school web on the other hand, is intended to be a recruiting and information source. With that in mind, we plunged headlong into building a graphically intensive site. With our limited knowledge of graphical interfacing, we immersed ourselves into the project. Martin Wisneski, Head of Technical Services, developed much of the look for the law school site. It is a fine line to walk between graphics and text only. We looked at other sites and realized that the sites that incorporated graphics were visually more appealing as opposed to sites that had little or no graphics and used a structured list link layout.

Since we agreed to use a graphically enhanced site, we next looked at the image loading issue. We standardized on JPEG files (Joint Photographic Experts Group) preferably less than 20k. Large compression ratios are capable with JPEG files. There are a few older browsers that do not support inlined JPEG images, most notable Mosaic 1.X: the image can be viewed with the aid of an external viewer. We also used width and height information in loading our images. By transmitting the width and height information in the anchor reference to an inline graphic, the browser can instantly create a bounding box for the graphic without needing to examine the whole graphic to determine size information.

We developed our first page with minimal content (a link to the main menu and a mailto: menu), its main function is to ensure rapid connection delivery (less than 10 seconds) so that we can hook the viewer. Remember that yours is only one of thousands of sites -- websurfers have short attention spans. To increase system responsiveness we decided that no page should take longer than 20 seconds to load. We tested responsiveness on my home system (386/25 with 14.4k modem, if your system is less than that you have my condolences). Most studies on user response to computing system delays suggest that waiting times longer than about 20 seconds are intolerable in routine, repetitive computing tasks (Horton, 1994; Schneiderman, 1992).

A major development consideration is page design. We used a 640 x 480 on a 14" monitor as our screen size standard, settling on a 545 pixel horizontal display area. Anything more will make the title banner or other inlined graphics too wide to fit within the default window size of the browser. The document length standard was set to two to three 640 x 480 screens worth of information with local page links at the beginning and end of the page (we link to our home page, previous page and next page). One major disadvantage of very long WWW pages is that the user must depend on the vertical scroll bar to navigate. Very long pages have the undesired effect that small movements of the scroll bar can completely change the contents of the screen, leaving no familiar landmarks to orient by. This gives the user no choice but to crawl downward with the scroll bar arrows, or risk missing sections of the page. Additionally, a user may become disoriented when the basic navigational guides, such as linkages to other local pages disappear off-screen as the user moves through very long pages. If you take into account users with character-based terminals, they don't generally read more than a few screens. They often only absorb what is on the first screen; if that is not interesting, they won't be bothered to scroll down. We split our long document pages into multi-part documents, indexing the pages to aid navigation. As an added benefit of the indexing scheme we found that our document editing became simpler. Finding a section to edit is much easier in a shorter document and is less strain on the eyes.

Another developmental concern is layout style standardization. We wanted our site to have a homogeneous look to it. A carefully organized design grid that is consistently implemented across a range of pages will aid users in quickly finding the information they want, and will increase the reader's confidence that they are using a thoughtfully organized collection of information. We want to have continuity but we do not want to stifle the creativity of our writers. Therefore we developed a house style sheet that will contain information on our choice of color backgrounds, buttons, footers and images we will use. We incorporated the footer style recommended by the Web Style Manual from the Yale Center for Advanced Instructional Media. In our footer section we display the author's name (imbedding a mailto: link), copyright marks, copyright year, last revision date of the page and the URL for the page the browser is viewing (I was shocked to find out that there are viewers that do not display the URL!). The style sheet will be mounted on the web for all to view.

Now that we had a general outline of our web, we developed a rough draft of the site with two or three levels of content as our initial demonstration. We first presented the initial design to our web experts, the librarians that worked on WashLaw, for their opinions. We wanted input from the administrative personnel at the school as to content and design implementation. The presentation gave use useful web technique recommendations that we implemented. We then had several developmental meetings where the administrative staff along with the development team discussed the progress of the site. We used these meetings as a sounding board for content and visual development. This would give the individuals with limited knowledge of webs a reference point from which to start. We incorporated the suggestions of our first meeting into the site, presenting the revised web at our next meeting. After incorporating the recommendations from the second meeting, we had a final presentation meeting where we demonstrated the completed site. This structure generated consensus for our house style and gave individuals an understanding of web development concepts, preparing them for their publishing responsibilities.

Of concern to us is how to develop writers who are initially unfamiliar with webs. Graphic, Visualization, & Usability Centers 3rd WWW User Survey (conducted June 1995), gave us some peace of mind in that regard. The survey revealed that most users (82.0%) spent between 1 and 6 hours learning HTML. Many users learned HTML in only 1 to 3 hours (55.2%). CGI was rated the most difficult (5.0) followed by FORMS (4.0), ISMAP (3.9), and HTML overall (2.5). Interestingly, none of these averages are near the maximum difficulty rating of 9.0. Additionally, the survey looked at how people learned to write HTML. On-line documentation was consulted by 88.4% of users in learning HTML. The next two most popular sources, books and friends, were consulted by only 29.2% and 25.2% of users, respectively. We are currently investigating HTML writing tools to find the best one suited to our needs. I am most familiar with HTML ASSISTANT while other members of the development team have used HOT METAL. Using one of these WINDOWS based programs will generate the HTML and store it locally on their hard drives. It will then just be a matter of using an FTP client program to load the HTML to our RS/6000. An added bonus will be that we will have the web site stored on several computers for backup needs (a master copy will be maintained by the backup mechanism of the RS/6000 and I have prepared a nightly backup of the web site for added protection).

Now that the law school web site is ready for use, I will alter my role in the development process to that of technical advisor, overseeing the technical aspects (style layouts, new web development techniques and maintenance and troubleshooting of the site). This site will showcase the talents of all of our members of this school, giving the site greater creative diversity than any one person could develop. With this thought in mind, I would like to see students get involved in this project. It would be interesting to see their freshness and vitality infuse our site and it would also infuse our site with an appeal complementing our stated target audience.

I see web development as an outgrowth of desktop publishing, an electronic magazine with a potential readership in the millions. It is a fantastic information dissemination device which has just begun to be explored and its role in our society is yet to be foretold. We are at the beginning of revolution, and we are swept up in its fervor with no end in sight but its potential is giving the revolution its blood. Momentous times indeed.

Explore our new Washburn School of Law Web Site at: http://lawlib.wuacc.edu/washburn/school.law/welcome.html

I sincerely hope you enjoy and if you have any suggestions or comments, please feel free to e-mail me at zzherr@acc.wuacc.edu.

*Lloyd Herrera has worked at Washburn University school of Law as the Computer Services Technician for two and a half years. Lloyd has participated in all aspects of web development, from the initial design of the law library web server to publishing StateLaw; a nationally recognized state government information site. StateLaw URL is: http://lawlib.wuacc.edu/washlaw/uslaw/statelaw.html

Literature Cited:
Horton, W. K., Designing and Writing Online Documentation, 2nd ed. (New York: Wiley. 1994.)
Schneiderman, B. Designing the User Interface, 2nd ed. (Reading, Mass.: Addison D Wesley 1992).
Patrick J. Lynch, Web Style Manual (Yale Center for Advanced Instructional Media, 1995) (http://info.med.yale.edu/caim/StyleManual_Top.HTML)
Graphic, Visualization, & Usability Centers 3rd WWW User Survey.


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