RememberTheWar.com launches
Vibrant design used to make historical content accessible
Launched on Remembrance Sunday, RememberTheWar.com uses arresting photography and design to create a user experience totally unlike the usual encyclopedia-style sites that document historical topics online. The result is a site that's instantly captivating and easy to dive into.
Harry told us the story of how and why he put Remember the War together:
"When looking for anything historical on the web, I found every site I visited to be a bad experience, nothing inspired me to read more deeply into a whole history of a war, a battle or historical event. With this in mind I contacted a friend, Phil Ricketts, with my idea and he instantly said yes.
"I would like to bring history on the web into the 21st Century by making historical events such as World War II into an experience and not only a list of historical dates and figures.
"I wanted the design of this website to be something anybody would be able to scroll through with ease – be it a 10 year old researching homework for school or my untechnical 80 year old Nan. I decided the best way about doing this was why by using photography, as nothing gets a message across better than a photo or a video. The only problem with this was I had to find good World War II photography to now use throughout the site.
"I approached the Imperial War museum but their online archives lacked in depth and quality. So I got in contact with a professional image buyers site and they cut me a deal. However both being sole traders me and Phil could not afford to take the time out of our working month and fund this project ourselves. So I approached all the lovely web people on Twitter with my idea and sure enough they all started dipping into their pockets and donating so that we could purchase the photography we needed.
"The build of the site happened over the last week with some very long working days. What was supposed to be a simple fixed-width layout became an adaptive layout with intelligent background scaling. The main challenge of the project has been the short timeframe to get everything together! Something as simple as putting a play/pause button on a website can set you back hours and hours, when you have to look into cross-browser HTML5 audio support.
"What has been an interesting part of the process, has been the user experience. We've learnt loads just by watching people use the interface, and learning more about what expectancies they have when presented with a website.
"Making this site has been quite emotional – I have been digging through hours of online video and content and most of what I read is so upsetting. Reading about the vast amount of innocent lives taken and seeing it in video format at times made me quite upset. I only hope my site will help keep the memory of World War II alive for the future generations and let them know the terrible and great things man is capable of."




7 comments
Comment: 1
Comment: 2
So I switched to Firefox, and after fighting to keep the first page (1934) open - it shifted me back to the home page unexpectedly 4-5 times - I was finally able to play the video. Once I started the video, I couldn't use the controls at the bottom, because the script that shifts the page was overriding them. I kept shifting down a screen while the video continued to play out-of-sight.
I gave up after a few minutes. RememberTheWar.com made historical content inaccessible for me. It's a shame, because the presentation looks like it might be very engaging!
Comment: 3
I'm so sorry you experienced such buggy issues with our site. This site was designed, built and launched (hurriedly) in a week - we've had very little time to test and tweak, and since launching we've discovered some issues with preloading on slower connections.
This will be fixed as soon as I can get time (I'm working at an agency right now, as we speak) - and should include a stylesheet for no-JS (note I've included noscript markup)/print and better functionality in iOS.
This really was a huge rush for us, and we know it's not perfect - but we decided better to launch it early with bugs, and have people enjoy (in some cases with a little perseverance) than launch it days and days after Remembrance day.
Thanks for the feedback, we'll be back soon with a better iteration of the product.
Remember the war.
Phil Ricketts
Comment: 4
For what it's workth, my experience would not have been improved with no-JS styles. I use all aspects of JavaScript in all of my browsers. The issue was for me was implementation. I was eventually able to get to the first content page in Opera, but the issue with video controls being overrode by page navigation controls persists in every browser I checked.
Also, I can't link someone to a specific page. So if I want to show someone a specific video, picture, recording or event, I have to tell them to press the down arrow 15 times to get to what I want to share. This is extremely frustrating, and makes it difficult to come back to the site on a regular basis or share it with others, because I'm forced to view content I don't want to see in order to eventually see the content I want.
To be honest Phil, Tanya Combrinck's invocation of the word "accessible" set a very bad expectation. If someone had told me this was a war remembrance site being used as a testing ground for newer Web technology, I would have had a much more positive outlook. The article makes it sound like this is being used as a showcase for how adaptive design can be used effectively, but it's really quite frustrating. If it's all about the content, then release the content first and work in technology gimmicks in v.2.
From what I've been able to experience after a little perseverance, this has all the makings of a really nice site! It just feels like it's been sabotaged by the technology used to create it. I look forward to seeing the next iteration, and I hope those missing elements that make it easy to navigate and experience a site are brought back so the experience can be more meaningful the next time!
Comment: 5
Please enjoy the site for what it is: A non-profit educational experience created by two guys with a passion for making things :)
Comment: 6
Phil
Comment: 7
> Please enjoy the site for what it is: A non-profit educational experience created by two guys with a passion for making things :)
I definitely do enjoy it for that, and kudos for taking on such a massive project and for the presentation of your content as a whole!
I'm just wearing my ".net-bleeding-edge-web-based-technology-by-designers-for-designers" glasses. It's hard not to view a site in that context when it's published and discussed here :)
FWIW, if I didn't see the value in what you've created already or believe that you're onto something, I wouldn't bother to respond at all. I look forward to seeing the redux on everything you're doing with site technology from here based on what you're learning from the initial launch. That will make for some fantastic .net reading! Please link to it once you've published it. I love seeing how sites get molded and refined based on feedback, and I know you're getting a large volume and variety of it from many people, from what I can tell on your Twitter feed.