:) From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of jason schluter Sent: Wednesday, April 28, 2010 8:39 PM To: [email protected] Subject: RE: Sketchflow for ASP.Net
Oh Scott, While you really should be showing this PPT to your therapist J I can see it clearly would have been great. Thankfully as a dev I just need www.silverlight.net<http://www.silverlight.net> Jason Blender3DLive ________________________________ From: [email protected] To: [email protected] Date: Wed, 28 Apr 2010 02:01:01 -0700 Subject: RE: Sketchflow for ASP.Net +1 agreed. PowerPoint FTW! :) - I don't know but that seems to always be my default win when I run into a Sketchflow wall :) Attached is an example of how I've used PPT in the past for website..(it was original my idea for how we should of done Microsoft.com/Silverlight back in the day - enjoy). Scott. From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Shane Morris (Automatic Studio) Sent: Wednesday, April 28, 2010 4:20 PM To: 'ozSilverlight' Subject: RE: Sketchflow for ASP.Net The reality is most mockup tools either don't produce target platform code (Balsamiq) or produced relatively useless target platform code (Axure). If you have Sketchflow skills already then I'd consider sticking with it. One thing that will annoy you though is that sketchflow doesn't inherently allow for scrolling web 'pages'. If you don't have existing Sketchflow skills you need to consider that these 'rich' prototyping tools (Sketchflow and Catalyst) have pro's and con's: - Con: harder to learn and less productive than lightweight tools like Balsamiq - Pro: Able to take prototypes to a much richer level of interactivity (and fidelity) - giving them an advantage for really rich UIs (like you'd design for WPF or Silverlight...) Shane Shane Morris | Automatic Studio<http://www.automaticstudio.com.au/> | [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]> | +61 438 818 888 From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Mitch Denny Sent: Wednesday, 28 April 2010 4:02 PM To: ozSilverlight Subject: RE: Sketchflow for ASP.Net Who says that the mock-up technology needs to be the same as the implementation technology. That would be like saying using PowerPoint for a mock-up is in appropriate because it isn't based on WPF/Silverlight/HTML/Flash whatever. Regards Mitch Denny Readify | Chief Technology Officer Suite 408 Life.Lab Building | 198 Harbour Esplanade | Docklands | VIC 3008 | Australia M: +61 414 610 141 | E: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]> | W: www.readify.net<http://www.readify.net/> From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Mark Sent: Wednesday, 28 April 2010 1:46 PM To: [email protected] Subject: Sketchflow for ASP.Net We have a Silverlight application and the boss likes using SketchFlow to mock up stuff. We are now looking at writing an ASP.Net app and he wants to know if he can use SketchFlow to create the mock pages. I've not looked into it, but AFAIK it's XAML only so whilst he can create pages for demo, we can't reuse for our web pages. Is that correct? Is there another tool? I'd hope to use ASP.net MVC framework if that makes a difference. Cheers Mark
_______________________________________________ ozsilverlight mailing list [email protected] http://prdlxvm0001.codify.net/mailman/listinfo/ozsilverlight
