Oh man wow, this site is quite nice and nicely done. I don’t normally go in for the jquery slider pages sort of designs necessarily but this one is just great, it’s also not overly complicated. I’m loving all the illustration (truly original) and the experience it creates by sliding around through the sections. The way the elements are treated as you motion between all the content is very slick. I absolutely love the animated navigation text too. Wonderful experience going through this site.
The Call to Action, Revisited
The Call to Action hasn’t changed in a decade, but the bar has. A fresh look at prominence, copy, mobile tap targets, and accessibility, with lessons from three major design systems.





It doesn’t work too well with JS disabled though, so a bit of a fail there 🙁
Just curious, generally does that matter anymore? Then specifically in this instance if we consider the the intent of the site?
Well, it does indeed matter, at least if you claim to do web development. Of course it always depends on the target crowd but as web developer you should still have the skills to make your website(s) as accessible as it can be since there are more possible ways to view a website than high end computers with the latest browsers installed.
It’s crucial that one can at least use a basic version of the site without JS, Flash, or CSS without any compromise in terms of delivery of plain information.
And by the way: They forgot to set a page background color. My browser default isn’t white and their site looks weird.