The default web design standard for links is that they be shown as blue text, which becomes a darker blue and underlined on hover (to suggest that mouse actions such as clicking are possible on that text). The Nielsen Norman Group (of Nielsen's 10 Usability Heuristics fame) has a good article, "Guidelines for Visualizing Links", that discusses design best practices for links.
There are currently several different link visualization designs being used throughout the EPICLab.github.io site, including:

- Document links that do not indicate clickability until you hover, at which point a link icon appears.

We need to develop a unified standard for how we visually communicate links throughout the website. This issue is an expansion of some discussion found in #26.
The default web design standard for links is that they be shown as blue text, which becomes a darker blue and underlined on hover (to suggest that mouse actions such as clicking are possible on that text). The Nielsen Norman Group (of Nielsen's 10 Usability Heuristics fame) has a good article, "Guidelines for Visualizing Links", that discusses design best practices for links.
There are currently several different link visualization designs being used throughout the
EPICLab.github.iosite, including:Button links that change text color when the mouse is hovered.

External links that adhere to the default blue text that changes color and underlined on hover.
We need to develop a unified standard for how we visually communicate links throughout the website. This issue is an expansion of some discussion found in #26.