The Tutorialism.com Website Has Been Updated And Many New Interactive and Social Features Have Been Added
July 27, 2006 (PRLEAP.COM) Technology News
Tutorialism, which is accessible for everyone at http://www.tutorialism.com/, is the first online service to offer its users a free and easy social bookmarking service specifically for graphic design tutorials. The site allows all visitors to submit online design tutorials they like or they have created themselves in many different categories, including separate ones for the popular design programs Adobe Photoshop and Macromedia Flash. After their submission those articles are showcased publicly on a page of the site where other users can vote for the tutorials they find useful and of high quality. If a tutorial gets enough votes this way it is promoted to the frontpage of Tutorialism where only the greatest design tutorials are displayed and receive an even greater exposure.After the big update many things visitors can do on Tutorialism have been greatly simplified, including the process of submitting a new tutorial into the database, which now only takes three quick steps. Other examples are the free member registration and the login procedure which are now both more user friendly and take less of the visitors valuable time.
Newly added features to the site include the new tag cloud page. This part of the site allows visitors to browse the already huge number of tutorials (more than thousand different articles) on Tutorialism by tags, which are short, generic words that describe the tutorials they belong to. Another addition is the "Tutorial Spy", a single page that tracks every action on the website a user takes and thus shows which articles are hot right now. The new top tutorials page does as its name says and lists the most popular tutorials of all time, ordered by votes they received.
"It's much better, but it's still not perfect and that is why we will continue to update the website and still add more new features. The next improvement might already be released soon.", said Tutorialism founder Thomas Höfter and invites all design enthusiasts to check the improved version of the site out at http://www.tutorialism.com/.