I have two copies to give away this week, of:
Dynamic Prototyping with SketchFlow in Expression Blend
DESCRIPTION
This book is for designers, user experience pros, creative directors, developers, or anyone who wants to create rich, interactive, and compelling products. If you want to communicate innovative ideas, research, experiment, and prototype in the language of the interface,
Dynamic Prototyping with SketchFlow in Expression Blend is the perfect text. Learn how to sketch, iterate, and validate ideas–utilizing the power and productivity within SketchFlow.
RULES
If you’re a member of the group through our meet-up account, enter a comment to this posting, and on Friday I will select two winners randomly from the commenters. Book must be picked up at one of our group meetings (sorry no shipping). Winners will be selected and contacted Friday 11 Feb 2011.








5 comments:
The cover is funny enough (compared to other books on the subject) to get attention. I'm very interested to see this book (I don't suppose I can get it for my iPad?) to see if it has a human-centric approach (which it looks like it does based on the cover) or a programmer approach (which is why we have so many ugly site IMHO).
Michael, sorry I just have the two as hardbound books. Its a fun good book. The first 3 chapters alone is a great covering sketching and dynamic prototyping are a solid for any designer, even if you not using Blend.
This looks like a great book to add to my arsenal! Plus, it gives me another good excuse to come down and see everyone :-)
julia@jfosterdesign.com
I would love a copy of this book as a person who’s trying to absorb all that he can on interactive media and best case prototyping practices—learning and absorbing what this book has to say will advance my career and keep me market competitive. Thank you.
@Michael - I don't think it is fair to blame developers for ugly sites, often developers are forced to make tradeoffs between what looks good in photoshop, what is technically appropriate and what the user is going to expect.
Creating an eye-catching site requires both knowledge of the technical limitations and a sense of design.
crobicha (at) gmail (dot) com
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