I agree with the comments posted thus far about capitalizing on the interactive 
medium and not constraining oneself to the limitations of paper. That being 
said, there is one case where I think it makes sense to emulate a paper form, 
at least as far as field names and relative positions. An example of this case 
was mentioned in this thread, referring to government forms. The general case I 
propose is when the business process requires paper forms to be filled and then 
get manually transcribed. In this case, the paper-form emulation can help 
optimize transcription rates.

Paul Eisen
Principal User Experience Architect
tandemseven


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