Kyle Adamo published an article today over at UX Booth about integrating Google Charts in your prototypes to deliver a high-fidelity experience. Not something you would need to do all the time, but very useful when you do. Here’s how you can do this in ProtoShare.
While working on our next set of enhancements to ProtoShare, we developed the following flowchart:
While you can set basic styles for each of your components using the Info dialog box inside ProtoShare, you may want to add CSS (Cascading Style Sheets) to add extra flavor to your web prototype designs. You don’t have to be a programmer or even have much experience with HTML to specify background images, font types, colors, borders, padding, alignment, and more using CSS.
Michael Hawley of Mad*Pow recently wrote an article on UXMatters that hits close to the office here at ProtoShare: Getting the Right Stakeholder Feedback at the Right Time.
Posted: September 20, 2010
I develop prototypes with a mixture of confidence and uncertainty. This approach is based on hard-won experience, and holds true regardless of the stakeholders involved, the complexity of the project, or the timeline. In the best cases, I derive confidence from participating in an open process that produces a thorough requirements document. In all cases, my uncertainty comes about because I’ve worked on too many projects where the requirements documents have proven to be incomplete.
Posted: August 13, 2010
Okay, we may not have a real yellow brick road leading you to the Emerald City, but if a tornado swirls you off course while working in ProtoShare, here's a guide to get you back to the Land of Oz—er Prototyping.
Posted: July 16, 2010 According to the 2009 Standish Chaos Report, 68% of IT projects fail, miss the deadline, are over budget, and/or missing key elements. New Bamboo reports that at least 30% of all website projects fall victim to the same issues. Even the most seasoned development teams and project managers experience project setbacks.


