They May Call It Home

In an 1998 interview to W3J, Tim Berners-Lee formulated his attitude to private home pages:

They may call it a home page, but it’s more like the gnome in somebody’s front yard than the home itself.*

Pages of amateurs were always an easy target. Usability experts, content providers and especially professional designers never miss a chance to kick those who were writing “Welcome to my Home Page” on their page. For example in 2005, the Dutch interaction designer Hayo Wagenaar, with whom I shared a panel at Decade of Webdesign conference, flung a remark:

The question is, what do we think of amateurs getting involved in web design? It feels like getting stuck on the highway behind a caravan.

Obviously Tim Berners-Lee was irritated by the activities and aesthetics popping up in the medium he invented and was in my opinion unjustly underestimating processes happening in minds and on pages of web amateurs. I could not share his arrogance until 20th of March 2007 when Google announced their themes for iGoogle: Seasonal Scape, Tea House, Bus Stop and others:

gnomgarten.png

gnomgarten1.png

On that day, Jessica Ewing, Google Product Manager wrote in the official Google blog:

… you can choose between the classic theme and the six new themes we’ve designed. We hope this feature makes the Google homepage feel a little more like, well, home.

Well, may be it is style of the graphics itself that makes me think about gnomes and front yard kitsch. May be the matter is Google’s vision of the users as little plaster figures that feel good when the the lawn looks neat. Finally, 9 years later, Berners-Lee’s analogy makes sense for me.


* Was published in the 3rd issue of W3 Journal, but only only Frans and archive.org kept a copy of it.

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