My two cents to the redesign debate

The debian website contains mainly documents. Either long texts of long
lists of information. These texts are accessed most comfortably with a
minimal amount of navigational clutter.
Single column text provides the best reading experience as you can easily
adjust the size of your window and change the text size though your browser
without unexpected results.
Complex visual design makes the website more difficult to maintain. Every
css float or unnecessary nesting of elements can end up creating annoying
limitations for future content.
The website really needs breadcrumbs, which is difficult as they only make
sense if the website is clearly structured.
The front page does not need the current vertical navbar if the main
sections of the website are given a well structured front page.
The experienced user should not be the main focus of the front page as they
are capable of skipping directly to the part of the website they are
interested in.

Mockups
manual page: http://kjs.homeip.net/projects/debian/install/
current: http://www.us.debian.org/releases/stable/installmanual

front page:  http://kjs.homeip.net/projects/debian/

These make the debian website seem lighter that the current whilst making it
(hopefully) a bit more elegant. This approach is probably not popular with
everyone as the redesign might be  expected to produce a richer rather than
cleaner design.
The debian logo has been made tiny to leave visual space for heavier
graphics in the content area of the website.
Note that the front page mockup could use richer graphics instead of the
debian vase and the pinkish getting started button. The layout is intended
to show an attitude to the structure of the homepage and is currently using
only existing graphical elements.

Again, these mockups have been created to hint at what can be achieved with
a brutally simple layout structure (much like the current) coupled with
considered typography and whitespace (the space between the elements of the
design). More bling  can easily be added in the form of images that are
allowed to be images rather that messily integrated in navigational elements
or layout structure.

critique is welcomed

ps. My first debian install was etch and I wanted to install it while it was
in testing. I could not find the download on the debian website. I finally
found a link from some other website.

--
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Kalle Söderman
e: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
w: http://kjs.homeip.net/
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