TechWhirl (TECHWR-L) is a resource for technical writing and technical communications professionals of all experience levels and in all industries to share their experiences and acquire information.
For two decades, technical communicators have turned to TechWhirl to ask and answer questions about the always-changing world of technical communications, such as tools, skills, career paths, methodologies, and emerging industries. The TechWhirl Archives and magazine, created for, by and about technical writers, offer a wealth of knowledge to everyone with an interest in any aspect of technical communications.
Subject:Re: Interactive manuals From:jlshaeffer -at- aol -dot- com To:techwr-l -at- lists -dot- techwr-l -dot- com Date:Wed, 03 Dec 2008 18:22:46 -0500
Peter,Â
I understand your concern, but it sounds to me as if Shannon will be documenting big, heavy, material things that'll break your foot if you handle them wrong. Think animated Ikea instructions on a massive scale. These things won't be updated every year, the way our wimpy bits, bytes and pixels are.Â
That said, my only relevant experience was with some limited experiments using interactive laser discs (yeah, golden discs about the size of a 78 RPM phonograph record). So, I'm way out of date.
Jim
-----Original Message-----
From: Peter Neilson <neilson -at- windstream -dot- net>
To: Shannon Wade <SWade -at- daktronics -dot- com>
Cc: techwr-l -at- lists -dot- techwr-l -dot- com
Sent: Wed, 3 Dec 2008 5:59 pm
Subject: Re: Interactive manuals
Shannon Wade wrote:
> I guess I should have been more clear. By interactive I mean using 3-D models
and having users click to walk their way through different steps in the process.
For example, on a sectional display, clicking moves section 1 into place,
clicking again shows the bolting process, etc.
Sounds like a real pain to update.
I've used these flashy courses at work (some of them *required*
material) that were for knowledge that was two or three years or more
out of date. I was wading through one, I think it was for Apache,
thinking, "This can't be right." Checked Wikipedia and a few key
websites, found that the technology was one or two major releases beyond
the neat course.
As far as I know there was no plan to update any of the cours
es, because
each one was too much "video" production that cannot be fixed by a paper
doc update release or a revised PDF.
So everybody gets a "diploma" proclaiming they've taken the course. And
nobody knows anything more than before. Sometimes even less.
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
ComponentOne Doc-To-Help 2009 is your all-in-one authoring and publishing
solution. Author in Doc-To-Help's XML-based editor, Microsoft Word or
HTML and publish to the Web, Help systems or printed manuals. http://www.doctohelp.com
Help & Manual 5: The complete help authoring tool for individual
authors and teams. Professional power, intuitive interface. Write
once, publish to 8 formats. Multi-user authoring and version control! http://www.helpandmanual.com/
---
You are currently subscribed to TECHWR-L as archive -at- web -dot- techwr-l -dot- com -dot-