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Jeff Finley

Still in the web design rabbit hole - what I'm learning so far | Finley Fridays #22

Published 15 days agoĀ ā€¢Ā 5 min read

Hey Reader,

Jeff here, I hope you've had a good week. I've been busy with web design stuff all week. In fact, I've been rather obsessed and haven't had time for much else (except releasing a new podcast episode).

Although I tried taking a break on Thursday because my right shoulder was really hurting me and I took that as a sign I was overdoing it with left brain, screen-based, activity. I felt like I needed to step away...

I took a CBD gummy (with a small amount of THC), and all that did was make me hungry, high, and sleepy. I just laid there in bed and noticed my mind rapidly connecting dots between all sorts of issues in my life, only to be forgotten and washed away by the next "noticing", and then the next, and the next.

In the past I would have been scrambling to write down these insights so I wouldn't forget. But then I wonder, who is the one doing the scrambling and why? Is he afraid if he doesn't remember them, they won't stick, or he won't heal, or he'll still be stuck in old patterns?

Or am I just too chill to bother because it feels so good to just lay there and exist without having to do anything. To feel worthy of love and acceptance because I exist. That there is nothing to do, no rush or pressure to "get it" or strive for that next phase of enlightenment.

These insights sometimes are washing over me like a fire hose and to grab on to any one of them, to examine it and attempt to understand it, takes a lot of energy to stop the flow, to pull in my focus to that one particular idea, to the exclusion of all else.

It's like floating down a river and admiring the surroundings. You can't stare too long before you pass it, revealing newer sights to behold. You can try grabbing onto a branch to stop yourself from floating past, which allows you more time to take it in, but soon the energy pressure builds up and you have to let go again back into the flow.

Letting go into the flow is our natural state. But it's the all. The everything. It's the narrowing of focus (of consciousness) through attention that allows us to experience something. Just one aspect of the All That Is.

But what is the All That Is and what is Consciousness? Who is doing the focusing? Who is doing the letting go? Who or what is carrying you when you choose to let go?

Not going to answer that. Just something to think about. šŸ˜‰

So anyway, yeah... I tried to relax and let go yesterday but my interest and curiosity on this web design subject just got the best of me. I found myself back on my computer in another tutorial or podcast.

Read on if you're into the nerdy bits.

Web Design in 2024?

Here's what I was into this week. Mostly learning and evaluating the different options for building websites in 2024. I feel like I'm all over the place and don't have a solid answer yet.

Forgive my mess, I'm still learning. I'm going to let you into my process and maybe you can help me sort things out.

ā€‹Page Building 101. I'm halfway through this 19-part YouTube course by Kevin Geary. I think it's great. It's bringing me back to 2005 when I was actually doing HTML and CSS, except he's doing it in a WordPress page builder called Bricks. I like that he's adamant about clean code, semantic markup, and doing things the right way. There's a lot to learn here.

This is my first real exposure to Bricks, which according to the 2024 WordPress Professionals Survey, is "the only page builder to increase its numbers over last year, racking in 32% of the total."

So far, I like it. It appeals to me more than the WordPress block editor does (I know I was into it last week). But it's not free. It costs at least $79/year to use Bricks. And if I wanted to use a CSS framework like ACSS or Core Framework, that costs more. The benefits of using a framework is to make it easy to stylize your site so all the type, colors, spacing, and elements are consistent and easily updatable.

However, it has me considering doing web design for clients now. I'm into that idea. Maybe that will be a thing. Who knows.

But after watching Kevin do what he does in Bricks, I really see the limitations of the WordPress block editor. A few months ago, he tried making a basic layout with it and found himself frustrated. Is that because he's just an oldhead hanging onto his "best practices" or is he actually onto something?

After listening to loads of podcasts and roundtable discussions, it seems that professional web designers are frustrated with how WordPress is moving forward. WordPress co-founder Matt Mullenweg describes in a recent interview, that he's trying to democratize web design, as he did with publishing back in 2003. He's trying to be more like Medium and Wix, making "everyone" able to build a website without knowing any code. I think he's got an idealistic, techy cult leader vibe going on but that's my opinion.


Okay... So...

I made this observation:

All the WordPress folks I listened to are older. Elder millennials or Gen-Xers. They're oldheads who have grown up with the web and watched (and helped) WordPress take over the Internet. Currently it's used by 43% of the top 10 million websites (source).

They currently have a large share of the web and are invested in maintaining it. They want to keep the free-spirited open source internet that we grew up on.

What are the young kids talking about?

Not WordPress lol. Not from what I can tell.

They're talking about Webflow, Framer, and Figma.

See Grace Walker, Bont, Nick St. Pierre, Flux Academy, Dan Petty. Alessia Sannazzaro, or Liam McCabe. The marketing appeals to trendier, Gen-Z aesthetics. It feels more design-forward. It's more visually appealing than WordPress, which still feels like it's stuck in the 2010s. WordPress is your Dad's CMS.

When I look at this newish creative job site Contra, they've got logos for Figma, Webflow, Framer, Shopfiy, and Relume... but no WordPress. No WooCommerce. Why no representation for the CMS that powers nearly half of the internet?

According to the 2023 stats, Webflow had only 0.7% usage percentage to WordPress 43%. And Framer had less than 0.1%. But why does it seem like there is momentum shifting away from WordPress and into these more sleek and modern tools?

Perhaps it's just marketing? I mean, the web design inspiration site Awwwards is sponsored by Webflow. So is Flux Academy. But The learning/education aspect for these tools is also really well done. There's Webflow University and Framer Academy. You just don't see stuff like that for WordPress.

But WordPress is free and open source. (But will cost you in all sorts of premium add-ons in the flea market of plugin developers). You download it and you own your website and can move it to whatever host you want.

Webflow and Framer are closed-source SAAS (software as a service) companies that cost money and lock you into their ecosystem. They're walled-gardens of proprietary technology that they control.

It's like iOS vs Android. Mac vs Windows. Clearly you can see the comparisons here?

So what should I do?

I have a very good reason to stay on WordPress, because that's where all my content is. That's what I know. Switching to something brand new might not be the best option.

If I were starting out in web design today, what would I be learning? What are they teaching in schools? What do I invest my time in learning?

If you have any insight to share, I'd love to hear it. What do you see here?

Talk soon āœŒļø

Jeff


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Jeff Finley

Personal Growth for Creators

I'm an artist, designer, music producer, author, and mystic with a passion for truth and personal growth. I like to share what I'm working on and working through each week, highlighting my creative pursuits and providing tips, tools, and resources for fellow creators.

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