Storyboarding Steve Chenoweth Chandan Rupakheti RHIT Chapters 13
Storyboarding Steve Chenoweth & Chandan Rupakheti RHIT Chapters 13, Requirements Text and storyboarding web article
Outline o Background n Barriers to Elicitation o Techniques n Brainstorming n Storyboarding Today’s second topic
Story o Who are the players? o What do they do? o How do they do it?
Get the idea from some Storyboard Examples o More movies --This one’s from Blade Runner o In the movie industry, storyboarders don’t think they get enough credit – See www. tipjar. com/dan/col omba. htm
Another Storyboard Example o More movies – Ace Ventura: When Nature Calls Storyboard from Storyboarding 101, by James O. Fraioli. Michael Weise Productions, 2000, ISBN 0 -941188 -25 -6.
Google Chrome o http: //www. google. com/googl ebooks/chrome/
Key Points o o o Purpose – Elicit “Yes, But” reactions Storyboards should be sketchy A place to add innovative content
Storyboard Types o Passive n Rough Sketches, screen shots o Active n Flash movie, linked Power. Point presentation. o Interactive n Realistic, and a live prototype
Advantages of Storyboards o o Inexpensive User friendly, informal, interactive Provides an early review of user interfaces of the system Easy to create and easy to modify
Scenarios o Scenario is a narrative describing foreseeable interactions of types of users (characters) and the system or between two software component o Used in usability research o Famous example n As we may think? - Vannevar Bush o See website http: //www. theatlantic. com/magazine/archive/1945/07/as-wemay-think/303881/
Extra Credit o Extra Credit: Read the “As we may think” article and write a report on it with special emphasis on the use of scenarios to describe a vision and your perspective on it. (Lessons - Extra Credit - Week 2 - As we may think) Due Monday, September 23 Class Time
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