![]()
![]()
|
Glossary Term:
Definition:
The goal is to reflect the relative importance of different elements, including the content and the navigation. It is meant to exclude the visual design of the page (the work of a VisualDesigner? ) and show exclusively the organization of the information (the work of an Information Architect ). Unfortunately, the Wire Frame often appears to suggest a layout for the content, thus infringing on the work of the designer, and compromising the main mantra of Content Management - "separate the layout from the content." One suggested solution is to make position-agnostic blocks of content that simply show the priority of content and navigation elements, from top to bottom, or left to right, or with nested hierarchies. A Wire Frame is called "flat" when it is a simple non-interactive graphic produced in Photoshop or Visio. Interacting with a flat wireframe consists of asking potential users what they think about it, where they would click to achieve some task is a scenario, etc. A superior method of wireframing is to build an HTML prototype, which is truly interactive and can link to wireframe designs for secondary pages. HTML wireframes are the tool of choice for Interaction Design. References: I Awiki HTML wireframes, by Julie Stanford IA Glossary Index | Back |
||||