In a word: awesome. This brilliant site sets the industry standard for smart, clean, clever online design. It's not flashy, but it's impeccably organized. Be sure to visit "The Issue Explained," "The Weblog," and the terrific animated graphics in "Special Reports." (
http://www.guardian.co.uk
)
The more you poke around this sophisticated Spanish newspaper site (don't confuse it with the duller Colombian paper), the more treasures you'll uncover. Their multimedia-savvy feature pages are outstanding. And their archives of animated graphics ("grafico interactivo") are dazzling. Be sure your browser is Flash-enabled. (
http://www.el-mundo.es
)
A remarkably handsome site, full of subtle, attractive touches from the clickable money map to the icons that let you change text sizes and column widths on the fly. A must-see site. (
http://www.iht.com
)
An extremely user-friendly site, with clean layout and attractive color. Stories make frequent use of "utility rails" strips running alongside the text that link you to sidebars, photos, video/audio clips and archived material. (
http://www.sunspot.net
)
The online version of The Arizona Republic is ambitious and active - almost frantic, at times. But this site is always engaging. It's a proponent of "sticky" packaging pages layered with polls, contests, video clips and endless extras to keep you hooked. (
http://www.azcentral.com
)
We're almost embarrassed to admit we enjoy this site, but it's fun. Trashy, but fun. Lots of entertaining choices, from video clips to gossip to puzzles and cartoons. It's loaded with personality something most media sites lack, sad to say. (
http://nypostonline.com
)
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