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878560 Posts in 32927 Topics- by 24337 Members - Latest Member: kellerx25

May 22, 2013, 07:21:25 AM
TIGSource ForumsDeveloperBusinessIndie developer websites.
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Author Topic: Indie developer websites.  (Read 5102 times)
JustRadek
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« Reply #15 on: November 04, 2009, 03:15:58 PM »

Hey guys, if you're interested our website went up recently and I've made a post summarizing its development:

http://www.incubatorgames.com/index.php/20091104/making-a-website/
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ChevyRay
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« Reply #16 on: November 04, 2009, 05:56:47 PM »

I always put my email right up in the open as well. It makes contact much more personal with your gamers and fellow developers. I have a spam inbox where spam goes, so as long as you don't bludgeon your email with naughty links and atrocious spelling, etc. it's just fine.

Site looks nice, very clean. I need to do a site makeover sometime, I've not been liking my own lately.
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JustRadek
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« Reply #17 on: November 04, 2009, 06:30:13 PM »

Thanks, I'd say I'm quite happy with the site myself, heh.

As for e-mail addresses, we'll probably put up ours sooner or later, but not before we make the switch to GoogleApps.
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James Kaudewitz
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« Reply #18 on: November 04, 2009, 06:42:40 PM »

Thanks, I'd say I'm quite happy with the site myself, heh.

As for e-mail addresses, we'll probably put up ours sooner or later, but not before we make the switch to GoogleApps.

My web host Recently told me to get GoogleApps (since their built-in webmail is crap and they block POP3 forwarding). I'm kinda POed. Hopefully it all runs smoothly, though. How's GoogleApps working for you? (or haven't you got it set up?).
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est. February 2009
JustRadek
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« Reply #19 on: November 04, 2009, 07:06:14 PM »

We haven't set it up yet, mostly because my PC/iPhone are hooked up to all my e-mail accounts so it hasn't been a huge priority.

My old company did use GoogleApps for e-mail, though, and they raved about it. They initially set it up just to have a better webmail client, but I'm guessing the spam filters and other features of Gmail didn't hurt either.
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gambrinous
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« Reply #20 on: November 05, 2009, 02:24:26 AM »

I found it incredibly easy to set up too.
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Hach-Que
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« Reply #21 on: November 06, 2009, 10:03:34 PM »

Google Apps is brilliant.  The first ever spam email to hit my inbox happened only a few days ago, compared to the years in which I've actually been using the service.

Not only that, but it's good for sharing prototypes and discussing ideas with your team members through Docs or Wave.  Wink
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nitram_cero (2bam)
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« Reply #22 on: November 07, 2009, 08:09:14 AM »

Slick page! I really like the flow and ease to the eye, and how all the info is there.
I must say my webpage sucks a lot in comparison  :D

I've been using Google Analytics and it's the most awesome shit ever. You can even see the click rate on an overlay to the real page (like, "this link was clicked 100 times a day", seeing it in the actual page). Unique visitors, trending.
I found really useful to see that 1/3 of the people that visited my site was using a Mac, and 90% had at least a 1024x768 screen.

For all of you, if you're showing flash games in your site, remember they can be embedded by an IFRAME.
That might seem ok for exposure but:
1. They are making money by adding banners and shit around (damaging the experience/not paying you)
2. They're stealing yaw bandwidths11!1

Solution: Add a "_top" checking JavaScript Smiley
If _top.location.href isn't anywhere near your site, change it so it is! There are a lot of scripts around for that.
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2BAM.com indie games
JustRadek
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« Reply #23 on: November 07, 2009, 11:04:14 PM »

Thanks! As far as the visual design of the site, we really wanted to make it feel spacious. Simply increasing the padding between the text, menu options, images, etc., went a long way towards that.

As a quick example, I viewed a sample post with two different CSS schemes. The first scheme used default text markup, and the post looked crowded and somewhat overwhelming. In the second scheme, I increased letter and word spacing by a single pixel, and line-height by two more pixels, and all of the sudden the post seemed that much easier to digest.
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