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Prototyping with JumpChart

One of my favourite reads of the moment is Web Worker Daily, a blog edited by Om Malik and Anne Zelenka. Or would you call it an e-zine for web workers? While it offers a wide variety of information for the modern day web worker it has some specific information that I always seem to get a bookmark from here and there.

Today’s post by Samuel Dean highlights an online prototyping tool called JumpChart. You can sign up for a free account with JumpChart to work on sites up to 10 pages, big enough for small sites, as well as having the ability to collaborate with non-technical people on the design. Then you can grab the prototype as clean XHTML and CSS. I’m not sure I like the idea of a JavaScript file for the navigation (which I saw in the last demo) - I’ll have to look into that - but seeing as this is a prototyping tool then maybe its fine for what its meant to be achieving.

JumpStart online collaboration prototyping tool

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Stand Up Guy

Steven Clark Steven Clark - the stand up guy on this site

An icon for overweight middle aged bogun-geek web designers. A lego block in a Meccano world. A synergy of tattoos, memories of bare knuckle fist fights, and old episodes of Star Trek. My name is Steven Clark and I'm a highly opinionated web designer with a few good ideas. I'm too old for fist fights.

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Currently Reading

Here Comes Everybody by Clay Shirky (cover)

Clay Shirky's Here Comes Everybody: The Power of Organizing without Organizations has been on my bookshelf for the last few months literally screaming to be read. In fact, I'm wondering how I got so sidetracked to have reached the end of the year without having consumed it. The message of the book is an area of my own fascination, the effects that our new technologies have on the way we relate to each other, and how we're now empowered in ways that were historically unheard of (or not even conceived of) not too long ago.

I'm a small town boy who grew up in the seventies, graduating high school in 1979. The world was slower - how did we survive without Wikipedia? Without MSN or Facebook? Nowdays we have flashmobbing and blogging and constant connection.