Posts Tagged ‘omnigraffle’

OmniGraffle tutorials, Part VI: Tables

Welcome back to our OmniGraffle tutorials, run by Mike Piastro, Ai’s senior information architect. This is the sixth and final (for now) in a series of short videos designed to help users get the most out of OmniGraffle with the least amount of confusion.

Today’s video is about tables. Watch the tutorial here.

Previous tutorials:
Part I–template setup and variables
Part II–shared layers
Part III–stencils
Part IV–actions
Part V–sub-graphs

UX

OmniGraffle tutorials, Part V: Sub-Graphs

Welcome back to our OmniGraffle tutorials, run by Mike Piastro, Ai’s senior information architect. This is the fifth in a series of short videos designed to help users get the most out of OmniGraffle with the least amount of confusion.

Today’s video is about sub-graphs. Watch the tutorial here.

Previous tutorials:
Part I–template setup and variables
Part II–shared layers
Part III–stencils
Part IV–actions

UX

OmniGraffle tutorials, Part IV: Actions

Welcome back to our OmniGraffle tutorials, run by Mike Piastro, Ai’s senior information architect. This is the fourth in a series of short videos designed to help users get the most out of OmniGraffle with the least amount of confusion.

Today’s video is about actions. Watch the tutorial here.

Previous tutorials:
Part I–template setup and variables
Part II–shared layers
Part III–stencils

UX

OmniGraffle tutorials, Part III: Stencils

Welcome back to our OmniGraffle tutorials, run by Mike Piastro, Ai’s senior information architect. This is the third in a series of short videos designed to help users get the most out of OmniGraffle with the least amount of confusion.

Today’s video is about stencils. Watch the tutorial here.

Previous tutorials:
Part I–template setup and variables
Part II–shared layers

UX

OmniGraffle tutorials, Part II: Shared Layers

Ai senior information architect Mike Piastro created a series of short videos explaining the ins and outs of OmniGraffle.

This is the second in the series. It discusses shared layers and the benefits of using them. Click here to view.

Previous tutorials:
Part I–template setup and variables

UX