Commerce site offers cyberclearinghouse for data
Connecting state and local government leaders
The Commerce Department's Web site, at <a href="http://www.commerce.gov">www.commerce.gov</a>, presents a navigable clearinghouse full of data, links and insight into Commerce bureaus and initiatives.
www.commerce.gov
A blue navigation bar at the top of the www.commerce.gov page offers jumps to the Commerce site's top areas: About DOC, Newsroom, Resources, Person Finder and Site Research. |
what doesn't |
' Intuitive, easy-to-use navigation bar for traveling quickly to areas of interest ' Elegantly sorted and centralized data about Census, e-commerce, cybersecurity and other initiatives ' Newspaper-style format, a favorite with Net cruisers ' Breaking news continually updated ' Handy and efficient Person Finder tool ' Exemplary research and data support for key efforts such as the permanent trade relations initiative and the government's electronic-commerce policy ' No bloated graphics to slow site viewing ' Page design a little busy for first-time visitors unfamiliar with Commerce and its constellation of agencies ' Sign-up service needed for automatic news release distribution via e-mail. ' No showcase for advanced e-commerce technologies such as audio and video streaming, 3-D animation, chat rooms and e-mail discussion lists ' Considerable real estate devoted to agency links grid that could go on another page ' Scrolling news story headlines box at top of the home page is gimmicky but not efficient |
The bar facts
' Roger W. Baker, chief information officer ' Jeffrey R. Neal, deputy CIO ' Karen Hogan, director of departmentwide programs ' Morrie Goodman, director of public affairs ' Three hands-on workers: a programmer-analyst and two writer-editors to handle day-to-day maintenance and news updates ' Design staff: two programmer-analysts, a graphic designer and a quality assurance specialist | Front end: ' Custom-built Lotus Domino database running under Microsoft Windows NT Server with an identical system for hot backup ' Windows NT Internet Information Server to support Web sites of Commerce agencies that use Microsoft FrontPage, Macromedia Dreamweaver and other Web authoring tools ' High-speed storage devices and high-capacity T1 Internet connections ' File storage through Domino's replication module that synchronizes dual servers running NT, plus regular tape backups ' Web authoring and maintenance through Domino, Adobe Photoshop and Illustrator, FrontPage, Dreamweaver, and hand-coded Hypertext Markup Language, Perl, PHP and Java ' Applications including Domino Workflow; Perl, PHP and Java; AltaVista search engine on a dedicated Compaq AlphaServer; and custom-built Person Finder running under Microsoft Internet Information Server
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Joe Dysart is an Internet business consultant in Thousand Oaks, Calif. E-mail him at joedysart@digitalubiquity.com.
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