

Mostly we'd go through several iterations, and only when things began to settle down a bit did we fire up the editors. This initial sketching would cover all aspects of the application-to-be: program flow, data structures, use cases, and UI layout. This planning can take many different forms napkin scribbles, phone conversations, whiteboard doodling, and sometimes an actual UML diagram. We've always done quite a bit of planning before we got our hands dirty in the editors. And, as I eventually realised, it is especially well suited for sketching and doing mockups. In quite a few, as it turned out! Obvious as it might be to the rest of the world, a touch screen is a very different input device compared to a touchpad and keyboard. Because let's face it, in what fields could it possibly bester my trusted MacBook Pro?

When I first got my pad, I bought it mainly as a testing device, not really anticipating to use it as an actual productivity tool. While waiting for my younger brother to post some long-promised content, I thought I'd give a quick overview of our design flow iPad usage.
