That is a good question. The beauty of the web is that readers can control their experience, be it with ad blockers, increasing the font-size, reader mode, or even changing the whole experience with user style sheets or Greasemonkey. This doesn't mean it's a waste of time to bother with pretty designs. People should build websites that they're proud of, and accept that people might override their design with one better suited to their needs or taste.
I do not believe that should include design elements that annoy most people (as I do believe scrolling animations do), even if they're free to get rid of them. Don't even get me started on accessibility issues. If a website annoys me and hasn't proven that its contents are worth it (guess how many times that has happened), I won't bother to go through all that hoopla but get my information elsewhere.
That is a good question. The beauty of the web is that readers can control their experience, be it with ad blockers, increasing the font-size, reader mode, or even changing the whole experience with user style sheets or Greasemonkey. This doesn't mean it's a waste of time to bother with pretty designs. People should build websites that they're proud of, and accept that people might override their design with one better suited to their needs or taste.
I do not believe that should include design elements that annoy most people (as I do believe scrolling animations do), even if they're free to get rid of them. Don't even get me started on accessibility issues. If a website annoys me and hasn't proven that its contents are worth it (guess how many times that has happened), I won't bother to go through all that hoopla but get my information elsewhere.