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As part of launching print on demand versions of our inaugural publication, I am gathering anecdotes about how readers have applied the “Working through Screens” ideas to their own projects. Have you applied “Working through Screens” to your own application definition and design efforts? If you have a story to share, please comment on this post, providing as much detail as you are comfortable sharing about your project and how you put “Working through Screens” to use. (Alternately, tweet @J_Burghardt or send an email to info@flashbulbinteraction.com). Your input will help Flashbulb Interaction improve future publications in our “Application Concepting Series.” I look forward to hearing about your experiences! |




I love it! Great content that is well organized and with elegantly presented.
I haven’t had an opportunity to use the book, Jacob, but I love the concept, and appears to be very thorough and well laid out. I love the running examples, and the graphics are great. I hope more people post responses here, because I’d love to hear real-world examples of how this is being used.
FYI, I am an instructional designer by trade, and therefore see some potential uses of this book in designing online training, but the company I currently work for actually specializes in requirements elicitation through software visualization, so this book is extremely interesting to me. Our software’s primary user base is made up of business analysts, for whom experience design skills are typically not a strength. The thought of creating learning interventions for our software that provide some conceptual scaffolding borrowed from the UX field has crossed my mind, but I wonder if I’m setting my sights too high. Just thinking out loud.