Sadly, no (I'm the OP, just using my other reddit account).
While technically it can be shared, I'm including encounters and other stuff onto the map and so it's kinda tailored specifically to my game and not "generic" enough to be shared.
BUT... I'll tell you this, I've always been a fan of Miro (miro.com) and you can create a free account to create a board to make this in. If you own all of the official Strahd maps, you can recreate this yourself.
What I didn't share in my video above is that I also have some fog of war over top of key areas so that my players (originally) won't see the town/city/dungeon maps until they have logically explored the area, in which case I'll uncover them. It works out well.
I've been around the block with so many different VTT's and while many have more robust features, 3D dice rolling, etc, I'm finding the "single giant map" to be more rewarding and interesting than using other tools with glitzier features. To each their own, of course.
Jumping straight into sketch is tempting and all the other steps look like a waste of time but I feel these steps are more like breaking down the product design into manageable modules that lead up to the final UI.
For user-flows you could try draw.io or whimsical.co (personal fav). For wireframes, maybe Balsamiq.
Nice job! You've clearly put a lot of effort into this one, it seems polished.
I sometimes use miro.com for brainstorming and drawing diagrams and mindmaps. The most valuable tool for an app like yours for me would be the ability to export diagrams to presentations slides or just as png files. Unfortunately miro has those only under paid plan, and they did not have individual plans last time I checked. Yours seem to have the presentation system built in, but it's not quite the same. I hope this feedback is helpful, but don't take it too serious, go for the features you see fitting, you did a great job so far!
There are plenty of tools for that - just search for an online whiteboard. Why couldn't you have been on a call with him using one of these? And "it's just not the same" isn't a valid answer.
My team is fully remote and we went through a one hour brainstorming session for one of our new products, using an online post-it board (think it was https://miro.com/ or similar), and that went fine. No messing about afterwards taking photos of the board and uploading it somewhere, and cleaning everything up.
You should checkout Miro, it's essentially a collaborative whiteboarding tool. I started using it for my online D&D games over a year ago, and turned all the mcdm playtesters into it.
My players like it because they can keep all their notes on there as well, along with any handouts they find, and reference them. Also because you can turn on seeing other peoples cursors it's easy for them to point at stuff they're talking about.
👋 Ian from Microsoft Whiteboard here. Thanks for using the app! It's early days, and there's so much more coming every day from our team. Just today we released a significant update to our iOS app, for example (and these features made it into the Windows 10 app recently too).
To address your specific questions/issues:
Check yourself. There's LOADS of provable theft and they can maybe dance around it in discord to some degree but try pressing them about the India Covid Relief Money....then look at your 777 BNB Transaction. Then look at the date the charity was voted on in the first place. The transaction happened nowhere near in line with when the Covid Relief money was theoretically pulled. By the way ASK them in discord WHICH charity they donated to. You won't get an answer other than "they are still looking for the right charity" or another smoke and mirrors answer. Here is the entire flowchart of safemoon wallets with important wallets and transactions labeled, highlighted trxs within wallets, and interconnected scams nobility and piggybank and how THEY tie in on chain. "Papa"'s side projects.
Flowchart: https://miro.com/app/board/o9J\_lx5kv5k=/
Well, the most annoying part is done :) Now comes the part that can be confusing. I have a miro board that shows you interesting crafts from older content you may want to have. The only thing I did not add was the crafted transmog because there is a lot of that.
For profession combo's I also have 3 recommendation setups on another miro board. They are set up in a way to have the most efficiency when it comes to gathering and materials.
Pick whatever you find to be handy because you have work with it. I can only give you suggestions.
I hope this has helped out a bid and if you have any questions just let me know.
This is how one person I know organises theirs: https://miro.com/app/board/o9J_kmJ9A1E=/
Sadly, I can't share mine right now as I am on my phone, but mine looks like a more traditional map, with many colour coded lines between characters showing relationships etc.
➔ NOTE: The OP used the Individual Free Account and most likely downloaded the appropriate App from Miro.com.
To the OP - You know you have reached a "balanced factory" when your in-game spaghetti factory looks just like your whiteboard production planner! 🤣
Thanks for sharing.
You can do a lot of online collaborative exercises in Miro. Check out some of the example prioritization templates, or you could even re-create your own monopoly money in it using stickies or shapes.
Interesting problem. In a regulated environment, you have constraints: ie, you can't get work Done until it comes back without some kind of approval.
So the main thing about working in a regulated environment is that very constraint: the regulators.
A few suggestions:
1) have a public planning board that includes colors for ROAM analysis goes out as far as you need to, and put milestones on it for delivering and receiving work (horizontal) vs teams (vertical). Put stickies on the board for everyone to see where those milestones are.
2) put string (literally: yarn or string) in between the things that depend on deliverables from teams
3) accept that regulatory means constraints
4) make sure you have everyone on a team that the team needs to complete some kind of releasable/deliverable work completely (ie do you need a compliance person per team? what about a secretary? etc.)
So part of this depends upon your teams, the other part depends upon your tools.
1) Use Scrum if you have complex work and frequent deliverables, use Scrumban if you need a lighter weight framework that allows you to publish work more frequently, use Kanban if many of your work items are the same size and you don't need to go too deeply into why things succeed and fail
2) do you meet and think about your tools, people, processes and relationships?
3) do you have executive buy-in?
4) do you have program goals?
5) do teams set goals?
6) ask people to read the Scrum Guide to see at least what is available to them.
Happy to discuss, I would learn a lot. Best regards.
I think (think) it sorta started with this, which was made by a fellow Redditor (can't remember their name):
https://miro.com/app/board/o9J_khvn65k=/?moveToWidget=3074457351339184371&cot=12
Basically, it's adding Levistus as a sort of alternate big bad for the end of the campaign, which adds oomph to the Ythryn chapter. There's certainly no official version yet a la mandymod's mod for Curse of Strahd.
In my version (I think), Levistus is interested in the Spindle in Ythryn because it could dispel the magic that's keeping him encased in ice. Avarice is working for him, making her way in a sort of parallel to the party in a search for Ythryn (basically getting them to do her work for her in getting access to the glacier, etc.). So the final battle will be something maybe in Stygia or somewhere Stygia-adjacent.
Try Miro, maybe? https://miro.com It's an online collaborative whiteboard, frequently used in the TRPG community. You can drag and drop everything you want, adding text, arrows, drawings, etc. Everybody sees what everybody is doing, in real time. You can put the sheets in there and a bunch of tracking cards to write on and to copy paste at will. It works great!
For me Miro has been the most powerful tool. Perfect fro everything:
I started using it with the team a bit before COVID started, I am very visual and stuff like google docs does not work for me, once we all had to start WFH we had such an advantage by having this tool with us.
I've asked myself a few times whether I should get a tablet, so I decided to answer it with UX (disclaimer I'm not currently employed)
Miro! I will recommend it to my grave. It's free for three boards and...I think unlimited members? IDK. Definitely at least two, hahah.
It's a flowcharting app, you can just copy-paste images into it and stick post-it notes wherever you want. You can do all sorts of wild things with it. And best of all, it's browser-based!
Here's some screenshots of my development for Nulaxia, to show some examples.
Can you write your ideas on post-it notes and position them on the Impact vs Effort Matrix?
Then, you can pursue the idea with biggest impact and least amount of effort from you (i.e. your skill level for that idea).
Also, before ranking the ideas, you can fill out the Ikigai template which can potentially answer some questions about your interests.
Any sort of custom automated tool would run into copyright issues, since K&W Warfare rules aren't Open.
However, if you're just looking for a tool, most of the playtesters, and people at MCDM use Miro https://miro.com/ to run their battles.
Also, Familiaize yourself with this website, It has some great stuff. Shameless plug, even though I need to add the rest of my sessions. I run the Followers of the Flame group, you can zoom out and see the Adventure Summary on the far far far left. https://miro.com/app/board/o9J\_khvn65k=/
RFtools dimensions is definitely the fastest way to get absurd amounts of resources. For some things you'd want ore (lapis, redstone, quartz + certus quartz.) For others you'd want blocks. (Emerald, diamond, gold.) The builder block can be used to quarry out the RFtools dimensions but you could just use a SS Alfsteel AIOT or something similar to mine it out. You probably want the cubes feature, and make sure it isn't the hollow ones.
If you've never used rftools dimensions, this might help.
Some additional information will help but I have some initial suggestions:
you could allways pick a gardening that support your proffession.
Herbalism = Alchemy or Inscription
Mining = Blacksmithing or Engineering or Jewelcrafting
Skinning = Leatherworking
Tailoring = Enchanting
and some races have increased skill
Hey there!! I would love your feedback on the prototype :) I have a recording of the prototype since it would take ages to guide someone through all the interactions - but this way you can pause and take a closer look at screens if you need. Let me know if you can see this link: https://miro.com/app/board/o9J_lvtfKK8=/?invite_link_id=87261186571
There is a section that says "feedback here" and contains the link to the recording and a place to leave comments :)
Looks like it could be a file type for some proprietary system the school could be using. She may need to upload it to a website or have a certain application installed. I found this site which says you upload that extension to it to view the file.
A great program which I think might fit the bill and is free is Open-Sankoré - http://open-sankore.org/en
You can draw, write, take screenshots and video on a whiteboard or desktop.
Hope it helps and fits the bill for you.
What are you not understanding here? I created the token....I Take 1 Trillion Supply...I send that supply to 1000 wallets, all of which I own personally. Now, I can "advertise" to the gullible "army" WOW, LOOK AT ALL THESE HOLDERS....and I still own 1 Trillion tokens as that individual.
Why? So that fools like yourself say "BUT THERE'S ONLY 8% WHALE DOMINANCE, THIS CAN'T BE A SCAM!".
1 Trillion tokens in 1 wallet = whale. 1M tokens in 1000 wallets? Still 1 Trillion Tokens...Still 1 Whale...Only now it can be spun as a positive because of all the "holders". The blockchain is clear but remains opaque. Situations like this one are areas it is opaque. Transaction hashes like these are NOT opaque...they are black and white as anything.
So is this flowchart with key wallets and transactions highlighted. I'll take specific transaction hashes over "whale dominance is X%", which as was already stated, is something that can easily be FAKED or intentionally Obfuscated on chain using VERY easy methods already described. Here's REAL blockchain analysis and REAL trx strings...not an irrelevant statistic
I recommend you look into Miro https://miro.com/ It's considerably cheaper than Illustrator and it's focused is on processes and project management. The teams i work with, we use it daily either as a collab tool or to shares timelines or even during meetings. It has been life savior since Covid.
For anyone wanting to use literal digital post its, I highly recommend Miro!
I use it for my homebrew campaign and it's been great to keep a flowchart of what is happening and where. My favorite feature though, is the ability to scan in sticky notes from the real world and have them be copied into the app on your board.
https://twitter.com/lstmeow/status/1442335775601741831?s=21
This is a good time to stop and reasses e.g.
https://miro.com/miroverse/mlops-stack-canvas/
What do you have, what do you need, what are the pain points etc.
Honestly, I hate most battlemat apps anyway (Roll20 is trash). Now, I can't speak to how well it works on mobile, but Miro is a great collaborative whiteboard that can work as a battlemat, and honestly, a Google Slides presentation is also really good for this.
Hiya,
I did a RPAN stream for warlock of firetop the other night which was fun. I had to go old school with paper and pencil though as I couldn't figure out the same thing that you are trying to do.
However, I just had a thought that you could use something like miro board which is like a free whiteboard collaboration solution:
Could work maybe?
https://miro.com/app/board/o9J_l5bmKcM=/
Depending on how you have your one ways, I put two green arrow options.
Basically a car having to go northbound has to much further, just get on the freeway and they wont do that, unless you force traffic options for a lot of city blocks to the bottom left.
I love miro. I actually paid the $200 to have more than 3 boards because I use it for work too. It does dozens of templates and you can just add them all in to get your mix. If you don't mind spoilers this is my rime of the frostmaiden https://miro.com/app/board/o9J_l6UqXXA=/
You can use templates for kanban if you want the agile board thing going on, mind maps, etc. It's a business analysis tool so it's kind of made for this stuff. You get 3 free boards, which are HUGE and you can just partition them off, until you need to upgrade.
Miro is an online whiteboard tool, very useful, easy to use, and a lot of features, haven't used for long-term campaign note-taking, but so far it has proven itself very good for planning one.
I recommend this video if you need some help getting started.
You might give Miro a shot. You can create some pretty neat stuff in minimal time with not a lot of effort. Flowcharts, storyboards, basically whatever you want to create, you can make it in Miro.
I'll usually take screenshots of character/location art, as well as battlemaps, if there is one. I highly recommend at least having a map for yourself, so you can verbalize/measure distances, ranges, and line-of-sight.
I've been told miro comes in handy as a shared whiteboard visual, so you can all draw basic map/dungeon layouts and simultaneously see it
"A Product Manger’s Daily Schedule" section from this article helps; Product Management Guide: Workflows, Daily Routines, Processes, and Tips.
No comments from me as I am still figuring out too.
It's a virtual white board you can share and work on in teams. Like Google docs where multiplier people can work on a style dic at the same time, but a white board with lots of tools.
Nice, thank you!
The idea is that 'process order' is roughly how these activities would flow in a project, so if you read through them in that order you can pick and choose which you need to "build" the idea of your project in advance (here's a Miro template that might make it easier to see that view: https://miro.com/miroverse/research-project-builder-research-skills-framework/)
And you definitely found a rough edge here: the 'impact ranking' is based on the idea that certain themes of skills will ultimately have much higher levels of influence / scope of impact in an org. And that's tied to the value chain diagram on the front page, expressing those themes graphically... and it's still a bit messy in drawing this out, I'm not quite sure how best to communicate that.
Thanks! I didn't make the flow chart though, that was u/Thorax. They have this whole idea board with a lot of other useful information on it: https://miro.com/app/board/o9J_khvn65k=/?moveToWidget=3074457352298886861&cot=12.
Hey everyone! From a Discord chat on awakened beasts recently, I cooked up a quick little Miro board addition to discuss the different awakened animals in the module, where they come from, and some potential ideas for backstory behind them. The colors reflect the levels at which you would typically encounter them in the module.
I'm personally partial towards making chardalyn a replacement material component for gemstone-requiring spells, hence helping to reflect how important/valuable it is, and tying it better to the regional story. But there's lots of good options out there.
I'm curious to hear other ideas for how people are handling the expensive awakenings in the area. :)
I highly recommend /u/JackTheRealDipper ‘s miro board on the topic
Also his site in general has great crafting resources golddipper.com
You clearly haven't done as much digging into the quests as I have done. They have done a great job of planting seeds for lots of quests all over (e.g. psi-crystal attunes to Id Insinuation) to make up for the random tables. But a few quests have very few entrypoints and could easily be overlooked and when things are SO varied and so scattered, guides really help with that. This is why this great guide/recommendation here does a lot more seed planting for different characters/quests to build more behind them because a few get a little bit left behind in that department (like Jarlmoot). There's so much content here-- and when you run it, you might accidentally reveal stuff before needed (e.g. Easthaven ferry) and lead low level characters into bad situations.
Note that I'm not at all saying WOTC did a bad job, they did a tremendous job. I'm loving this. There's just a lot of value that is hard to unpack given the density of this product.
Thanks for sharing, u/Snoo_57488! These are fantastic points. I've created the below free framework, which is a collection of industry's best design thinking methods to help people with 1, 2, and 4 on your list:
https://miro.com/miroverse/category/strategy-and-planning/brand-sprint
Keep up the great work! And cheers to our next decade of leaning.
Look into https://miro.com/. It's an online collaborative whiteboard with sticky notes! I emailed them and was able to get a free educational account to be able to use it with my students.
I took an online design course this spring where this was used and I really liked it from the student perspective.
I sent your comment to the founder of Freight Trust, and here is his reply concerning what you said:
Sam Bacha:
We don't tell carriers their EDI transaction set, they can have custom options
It's called mapping and parsing https://miro.com/app/board/o9J_kslKHiQ=/
that map is specific to the smart contracts, which is a layer ontop of the EDI message, we run like klienschmidt.com like EDI service, but instead of just messaged we are making them actual legal documents as well
$EDI token is the unit of currency for the network
$xEDI is the unit of transaction on the network
Think of $EDI as eth and $xEDI as gas
in order to send traditional EDI transactions they are priced per transaction (unit of transaction) and in per kilobyte terms (unit of execution)
When all those transactions are on chain we can then match future delivers together in order to reduce deadheading
By optimizing for that we can save them money
Future drop offs and pick ups, basically we know where the truck will be in the future because it's been contracted to do so
How does one get adoption? Well optimizing for that is big incentive for companies that own assets (the actual tractor or trailer etc)
If you own assets you will want this because the volume you move means even more savings
Everywhere I've worked we throw documentation in one central location (a wiki). This will have links to the shared drive, repo etc. It's where everyone should look first for answers.
In terms of version control issues that's down to not knowing how to use git effectively. Try something like Git Flow. Also enforce prefixing all your git commits with the issue number from the issue tracker. As for big picture diagrams, I recommend things like miro.
The one mistake I see is people is not investing in their infrastructure. Put in some effort in to the little things like integrating issue tracker and build notifications into your team chat.
Treat people having to run all over the place to view important info as a real problem and invest time into a solution.
They can travel south along the Kingsroad - but they need to have a destination nonetheless. Are they going along the road to Lord Harroway's Town? All the way south to King's Landing? Even further south, to Storm's End?
Also, if you wish for them to attempt to hide their identities, it needs to be submitted as a plot via modmail.
I agree with many here that your actual strategy is going to be far more nuanced than any simple answer someone can give you here, but if you're looking for "colorful templates" try Miro. They have things like GTM templates, maybe this is more along the lines of what you're looking for, but I don't think you'll find "strategy templates" as you can't really boil down strategy into a template.
Yes. This year I am using a new approach and created a Mind Map on miro.com, populated with two main branches: professional life and personal life. From there, each splits off into associated projects and tasks. As I complete a task—for example, I am wanting to read one book a week—I add it to the Mind Map and ~~strike it out~~ to show it has been completed.
I tend to use Miro for this kind of thing. It's kind of like an all-purpose whiteboard, and mind-mapping is one of their features. Once you're done you can export it to a pdf and load it up to your obsidian.
Free version should get you to what you need. I've done the paid version before but it was really just to have higher res exports.
I don't know any official character design documentation so I just improvised one. Here is the info I did for the concept artist https://miro.com/app/board/o9J_lofrIIc=/?moveToWidget=3074457366689078810&cot=14
Hello everybody,
I'm currently doing an informational infographic about anabolic steroids for one of my university projects. My main goal is to educate and to reduce harm (when it comes to misuse). It will be aimed at people aged 18 to 29.
Imagine there will be an infographic like that at your local gym. What content/information would you like to see there? Or rather, what information would you like younger people/beginners to see there?
Disclaimer: it's not gonna be a "how to" guide, but rather a small booklet with general information.
Here is the information I gathered so far: Miro Board
Yes! every character is controlled by a finite state machine.
The one I made for my characters looks like this.
Every character in the game has a state with a frame counter and each state defines a bunch of things like the gravity, physics type and a list of frame data like, animation data, hitboxes, does it triggers a fireball? etc.
To know more about how to architecture fighting games checking out how to make a mugen character helped me a lot.
I found it pretty easy, to be honest. GMLess games tend to be a lot lighter, rules-wise; the most important thing is that every player is in on playing together (no superstars, no 'i just want to watch, really') players.
Recommendations:
Alice is Missing. There is a great Roll20 scheme you can purchase for it to play online, the corresponding Discord scheme (which is also great) anyone can get by going to the game webpage and clicking a button. Amazing game, easy to play and setup.
Forget Me Not. Uses a pretty easy setup with cards to create a basic character map, and easy rules to structure the narrative while providing a lot of freedom.
Death Takes A Holiday. Has two versions of rules, I recommend the cardgame-based one.
Fiasco, newer edition. The new version of probably the biggest game in the field. Also has a version of Roll20 that works very well. Also see below.
​
By the way, the latter two will need a good online card game provider, I use playingcards.io. It is free, and I find it easy enough to use. There is an open-source alternative, I just can't remember the name atm. Should be easy to find.
​
Other good games without cards:
Final Girl
Archives of the Sky (this one might be a bit harder to play, it also aims at campaign play. Rules are free, though).
Beyond the Storm
A Complicated Profession (for this one I would recommend a Miro.com board for online play, there are a lot of character sheets)
Fiasco, old, dice-based version.
Any of the Protocol games (same author as Forget Me Not). There are somewhere north of 50 of these. They use a standard card deck to structure the narrative, and you only need to draw. So, that can be done with a bot in Discord online. You can choose your favorite flavor and buy the corresponding Protocol game.
use google docs at very least. There are miro.com, whimsical.com, atlassian confluence for help as well. In general, try to move into cloud. Not sure if this is devops work though.
I can't remember which template used but there are some Miro templates that centers around strategy, retro and other objectives in a game format. Here is the link to the Miroverse templates: https://miro.com/miroverse/
Have you tried Miro? Excellent for all kinds of collaboration, but particularly useful for visual collaboration, as you can see everything on the same board in real time and create charts, tables, find connections, etc.
Hope that fits your needs.
I haven't used miroboard for fic timelines but I've used it for notes storage
https://miro.com/templates/timeline/
Its an online infinite whiteboard with lots of tools. You can get a free account. You could store your timeline, character notes and research all in one place if you wanted
ChronoCraft is a MMO-RPG minecraft modded server. Currently it has:
We are planning more features:
Currently we have a small playerbase of alpha backers supporting the project funds. And sometimes we host free public events to join.
Our game design mind maps can be found here: https://miro.com/app/board/uXjVOfseA7w=/?invite_link_id=371172578053
And video of gameplay can be found here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BLnRgIV1V3w
I personally use Google Docs and make tables with Headings, sometimes I use multiple documents.
I recommend trying https://miro.com - I've been trying to use it, only bad part is you can only use 3 whiteboards, but it's limitless I think. Instead of using 1 whiteboard for a game idea I use 1 for multiple game projects. I used 1 for worldbuilding as well by using rough shapes for continents and stuff.
If you do find anything better I would like to know as well.
I just checked out Whimsical because I've never heard of it. Whimsical seems similar to Miro, and Notion integrates with Miro: https://miro.com/marketplace/notion-embed/
Not sure if this helps you.
There is not full AI scripting based on any leaked information.
Source: I'm the one that took the leaked information and made the really easy to read reference sheet and full recreation of the Nodegraph in a whiteboard app. To be extra clear, I didn't leak the info I used for this, I'm not on the inside, I just knew what to do with it after it leaked.
https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1nWTARlv1CZKfNVOramvxRC6u56VvK4GrqpLJZP4IPbQ/edit?usp=sharing
https://miro.com/app/board/o9J_lr0S6gU=/?invite_link_id=747715511113
https://miro.com/app/board/o9J_lx5kv5k=/
This is a spaghetti chart, which shows a wallet taking money from the LP, to which he used the LP money to send to his friends (who then bought houses with the money). No one knew who owned the wallet, but it has always been presumed to be Thomas.
In a Twitter space with all the old (Scam) devs of Safemoon (rostik, hank etc) Thomas confirmed that the wallet with 1 trillion tokens was his, and that he sent kruelty money to buy a house.
(4 parts, this space was over 7 hours long when I watched it, but it is mentioned in here, just don’t know exactly where).
My answers are: 1 - Deadlands: The Weird West/Savage Worlds 2 - Form Fillable PDFs sent to the players (with copies sent back to me) 3 - As GM, I roll in Roll20 for all to see, as do some of my players. Several roll physical dice and tell me the result. I trust them and we are all there for fun. 4 - I would never dream of sharing rules via a slack channel. Handouts I've taken to using a Miro virtual whiteboard and posting them there 5 - We use Roll20 to visualize turn by turn sequences (combat, chases, etc). We use maps and other content posted to our Miro board for other visuals 6 - Microsoft teams is used for voice chat and screen sharing 7 - I really love https://miro.com/ 8 - I miss being in person and rolling physical dice, but I've been able to add a friend who lives two provinces away to our game so there are trade offs.
A link : https://miro.com/
Adopted after spending some time with Roll20, Astral, Let's Role, Owlbear Rodeo, Role, Fari, Google & Microsoft whiteboards.
My players and I love Miro because it's very easy and funny to use. As a GM I can set up handouts, maps, videos (well, shortcuts), pictures et al for some great board experience. The only pain in the neck is that the basic, free account allows only for three (3) boards - and my players won't be paying for more ;-)
PS: Now that I think about it, I also used Trello for "session zero", and it really delivers.
I've always said.. product is not a democracy. People don't get to "vote" for what they think is right - but influencing people to accept it is a whole other ball game.
A few things you can do:
- Have constant meetings and make sure everyone is aligned.
- Have sprint kick-offs and reviews so that everyone is up to date with progress.
- Open up the feedback and product processes so that everyone knows what happens when someone gives feedback and how it can potentially evolve into a solution that gets implemented.
- If people start fighting over priorities, you can play something like the Product Tree Game. This helps people negotiate and understand priorities across multiple teams.
This pic is made on an online whiteboard called "Miro".
The image of each card uses icons that can be searched from Miro and free SVG images.
"Miro" can also be used in the free plan.
You can export to JPG using frame parts.
The pic I posted is a JPG export from "Miro".
If you like, please register with "Miro" and copy from this address to use.
https://miro.com/app/board/uXjVObc90ek∗?invite\_link\_id=949491877074
Sounds like you in loooove
Na jk idk dude but if it keeps happening you may.
While your memory is fresh you should write down anything and everything you have done in the last two weeks. Where you went. What you are. Where you ate. Who you banged. Everything that came in contact with your body (soaps, deodorants, toothpaste). Have your home checked for molds. Medications your taking. Where you picked up those medications. create a MIRO board
Check your house for mold. Get your gut biome analyzed. Get your genome analyzed.
Lot of work but you may be happy for it down the line.
This is of course if you continue to feel bad
Hello Citizens. Please find a link to my input on some proposals that might help BZ reach top 100. As there were too many ideas to put into a comment I took the opportunity to toy around with Miro (it's been a fun experience). Fell free to look around it and share your opinion. If articulated improperly or unclear I take full responsibility rofl https://miro.com/app/board/uXjVOczHKyo=/?invite_link_id=171756905940
Pen and Paper work forsure and are always reliable lol. I don't like handwriting DETAILED notes, but quick things to move to the computer and build on later. The easiest, most usable thing on the computer imo would be Google Docs. Formatting is easy, i love utilizing headings and the document outline rather than a clunky table of contents. and its free... so usually the first I suggest.
i use the notepad app a lot lmao just for jotting down quick things as i think of them, then move them to their proper spot later.
Depending on how you want to plan, I've been suggested Miro. I haven't messed with it much and free options are limited but it could be an option.
I've also been playing around with Campfire, but it's more for worldbuilding, i think? But it's really nice to have everything in the same place during the creative process. Again, free version is limited (though I'm not sure how much) but you can buy modules or extensions or extra slots for things for like... $1. Really neat, i like it and I'm not even creating LOL.
I feel the same way. For over 5 years I have been trying to learn game development, but every time I start I just give up or just don't know how to start and get overwhelmed or find it too difficult that I fall asleep or get so uninterested and uninspired that I get depressed and don't even touch it for a while. I have so many game projects I have been writing but haven't even begun to think about where and how to start. The only thing I have somewhat worked on are some projects on Mm's Dreams, like some Star Wars locations. Even that I give up even though I always have TONS of fun. I don't really get it. But I'm starting to.
For some months now, I have been realizing that this might actually be a symptom of ADHD. Try looking into it and see if you have anything of that sorts. Though, not certain.
I suggest if you have a PS4 or PS5 to try out Dreams if you find game development on PC too difficult. It won't guarantee a finished game, but you will achieve WAY more than you ever did on the PC. Sadly it might not be as rewarding as on PC (for now) but you will have more fun.
I would ask that we could collaborate on something, but I have issues with committing to projects. I could probably try giving some small tasks.
Oh yeah I also recommend trying trello.com or miro.com or some project/task organizing thing to give yourself some tasks to complete and organize a bit.
Hopefully this helps??
Hey there!! I have a recording of the prototype since it would take ages to guide someone through all the interactions - but this way you can pause and take a closer look at screens if you need. Let me know if you can see this link: https://miro.com/app/board/o9J\_lvtfKK8=/?invite\_link\_id=87261186571
There is a section that says "feedback here" and contains the link to the recording and a place to leave comments :)
For my Y8s I found the Miro board useful for mapping activities/discussion. I pre-emptively make a template (mind-map, forms, etc) for whatever activity we're planning to do, then screen-share it to the class.
Miro also allows unlimited user access and something I planned to try (but didn't get time to as lockdown ended) was to slowly let students gain access to the board so they could contribute themselves rather than just me doing it while they unmute/use chat function. The board shows the names of everyone as they use it so if someone does something naughty, it's easy to identify and remove them and they'd have to 'earn' back the right over time.
For my VCE classes, I run more discussions using case studies. Get the class discussing, whether with mic or on chat, and then I just link their discussion back to the content. The lower scoring kids really enjoyed this, and a few asked to do more even when we returned back to campus (usually I wait to do case discussions after the bulk of the theory is covered).
im actually here to offer a third option miro. I use miro for my campaign notes, and its the most helpful for me because it allows for non-linear note taking. miro is essentially a white board with post it notes, you can have arrows, draw, etc, and I love being able to follow down a web of info that branches into other webs, which is really helpful for say, faction info.
And it's free, so id recommend you at least c. I use miro for my campaign notes, and it's the most helpful for me because it allows for non-linear note-taking. miro is essentially a whiteboard with post-it notes, you can have arrows, draw, etc, and I love being able to follow down a web of info that branches into other webs, which is really helpful for say, faction info..
Yes, it's a great framework. I'm currently using an adapted version called Design Sprint 2.0.
Here's a template in Miro that you can follow.
If you need any help during the process, feel free to reach out.
I feel like this is possible, but am not quite getting your use case. Can you draw an image or flow of this? Either a flow chart or just something on a whiteboard like Miro.
The studio flow suggestion seems to be viable, but I'm not sure I perfectly understand the context of your use case and why you need to change the "to" and "from" numbers (which you can totally do, but depends on what infrastructure you have set up already).
Great edit, you added some decent funny clips I actually laughed at, but why is there a watermark for Created by RenderForest.com if your intro was created there
then fair enough but there are other ways to make intros without watermarks, either way great video bit short but funny!
What format are you expected to deliver in?
Given the timeframe and size of project, I would have said Rise too. Try contacting them to extend the trial? Or pay for a month?
If it really has to be free, Moodle is a good free LMS. And you can create content in it - sequences of text/graphics/video/audio etc, and quizzes.
Adapt is a good free e-learning authoring environment. Creates a scroll page of various block-types, like Rise. More modern than slide decks with next buttons.
Both Moodle and Adapt require command-line tech savvy to setup, as they are server-based. (remote or local.) You could build huge varied courses with those two - after significant upfront effort and learning curve,
What's your definition of e-learning? A series of tutorial videos, inside HTML pages can be a good solution. Try Explain Everything ... https://explaineverything.com/.
Powerpoint is also good for making graphic annimations with voiceover, then exporting to video
Good luck!
There is an education version which is a stand alone purchase that doesn't require a subscription but you need to be using ASM/VPP/MDM to deploy it. You can buy licenses and distribute it via your MDM: https://explaineverything.com/explain-edu/
I've not tested it with what you specifically want but our teachers here use an app called Explain Everything. It's a whiteboard app that allows you to export as a video.
An idea
Scrap the touchscreen TVs
Have iPads + Apple Pen available in meeting rooms
Push people towards collaborating on iPads instead
e.g. how they do it in this video https://explaineverything.com/digital-whiteboard-on-a-remote-meeting/
So:
Start zoom meeting
screen share the iPad
on the iPad, run the whiteboard software
Work on the iPad
Remote attendees can also work on the whiteboard software from their computers (point/click/keyboard)
Explain everything works. Have used it for years with iPad. They have since switched to a monthly fee. Used to be cheaper when I bought it though. You can auto save to a bunch of clouds. Pdf exports, etc.
Are you trying to record a lecture like that to upload to an online learning system? I've been doing that all semester using Explain Everything (I use an iPad but there's an Android version). If you look at the videos they have, they show it doing some pretty complex stuff. I mostly use it for annotating PDFs as I talk, or to use it as a virtual whiteboard.
The big advantage is that the recording controls are really simple, so I found myself wasting very little time in my recordings. If I screw something up (or if the dog starts barking at the neighbours) it's trivial to go back a few seconds and only re-record the last sentence or two.
https://explaineverything.com/ kind of feels like a big giant open canvas, so when you said "like cutting pages from magazines" it made me think of it. I haven't personally used it (yet) a coworker and I were just reading about it the other day so it's top of mind.
The thing I do use is Google Keep. At the surface it may feel like a regular notepad app, but you can color code, add links, add a key photo, etc. I like that I can use it across platforms (vs just a standalone app b/c I don't just find things on my phone).
Have you thought about incorporating digital whiteboard? I have been using Explain Everything for over 3 years now and I'm satisfied. If you need some inspiration this is worth reading. https://explaineverything.com/11-creative-ways-to-use-a-digital-whiteboard-in-the-classroom/
Maybe Explain Everything? It's an interactive whiteboard. As far as I remember it's available on Chromebook and other platforms. Definitely worth to check it out if you want to play with videos, recording, audio and sketchnotes.
I do similar with PowerPoint and a surface,
Also Explain Everything with IPad Pro and Apple Pencil (https://explaineverything.com) which I prefer over using PowerPoint with my iPad.
Multiple ways to do it.
I'm one of those STEM educational people out there. For my videos, I use Open Sankore as an excellent free (both as in beer and as in liberty) e-chalkboard software for Win/Mac/Linux. It also autocaptures to a podcast form, both when you're in e-chalkboard mode and desktop mode (I use it for online IDE for programming, as well as a Minecraft "Let's Play" I do on the side on a different channel.)
I would love something with the stylus-oriented interface of Windows Journal and the PDF-editing capabilities of Open-Sankoré.
I am amazed at the number of dedicated mind mapping apps in the App Store that do not support the Apple Pencil. I haven't found one yet that does.
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I have discovered Whiteboard by Microsoft. It is an infinite whiteboard, so essentially it acts as a mind mapper for me. The iOS version is free, and for me it is very intuitive. It works well with the Apple Pencil 2 and iPad Pro 12.9" 2018. While it is not a traditional mind mapper, it works great for brainstorming.
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The app's only issue is if you want to share and collaborate with others. The iOS app allows you to create a link to a private web page and to invite others. But in order to actually use this web version, known as "Microsoft's Whiteboard web app preview," the only folks with current access are Office 365 admins (not Office 365 Home or Personal; it has to be Office 365 Business) or commercial accounts. https://products.office.com/en-us/microsoft-whiteboard/digital-whiteboard-app
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Since Whiteboard is new, and since over time OneNote became more widely available and eventually free, there is hope that the same could happen with Whiteboard.
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I would love to see a mind mapping app for iOS and macOS with Apple Pencil support and iCloud collaborative sharing. I want to be able to draw on the map with a pencil or add text and even sticky notes, photos, etc. Something between a mind map and an infinite whiteboard. You can do almost all of this with Microsoft Whiteboard, but the share function is limited.
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For personal mind mapping on a whiteboard, I am enjoying the app and hope they eventually add collaborative support for personal (free) Microsoft accounts.
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You can use https://openboard.ch/index.en.html and draw on your desktop. You will have to fiddle with it but my wife is a teacher and it seems to have features similar to classroom white boards.
I use OpenBoard with a Huion drawing tablet. Works a lot like the old SmartBoard I had in my classroom. I can use the built-in whiteboard screen or write over apps like Desmos and Khan Academy. It autosaves the work I do with each class, so I can post the noes & examples as a PDF in Google Classroom for students to refer back to.
Freie Software für freie Menschen:
https://openboard.ch/index.de.html
Funktioniert wunderbar mit SMART Boards (also den "originalen" von Smarttech) in jeglicher Ausprägung (klassische M600er mit Beamer, 6000er, MX, usw.). Sollte vermutlich auch mit den digitalen und interaktiven Whiteboards / Displays anderer Hersteller funktionieren. Man muss halt einen Rechner anschließen, aber das ist ja bei SMART Notebook bspw. nicht anders. Auch für die cloudbasierte Variante der Software gibt es einige kostenlose und ggf. sogar auch freie Alternativen. Letztere müsste man dann selber hosten.
It's great, and i like ur idea and even i could implement it as a feature maybe, or even focus on this whiteboard app, but, have u seen this? > https://miro.com
This could be a potential competitor, and I think that Miro covers all the things that u mentioned. Tell me if I'm wrong
I like the landing page, it's important to maintain consistency between landing pages and websites because it builds trust. Here's a great example of a landing page that I came across this morning while commenting in another subreddit for a SaaS: https://miro.com/l/remote-collaboration?utm_source%3Dgoogle%26utm_medium%3Dcpc%26utm_campaign%3DS|GOO|NB|US|ALL-EN|Core%26utm_adgroup=Collaboration%26utm_custom%3D13949166448%26utm_content%3D534428755627%26utm_term%3Dcollaboration%20board%26matcht...
Notice how it's not too different from the main site miro.com? So I think it would be good to incorporate the same look and feel between both. Trust is built through the users expectations meeting the experience.
. The workspace has more than 300 artboards/screens. It would be a lot of work individually organizing them after exporting them as individual jpegs
. Unfortunately there is no miro plugin in Adobe XD. However in Miro itself, they offer a way to import artboards thanks to a Share link but the artboards must be linked (prototype style) together. It will be a lot of linking between artboards and it's not convenient if I move things around a lot also it won't be a real representation of what the workspace looks like :/
https://miro.com/marketplace/adobe-xd/
Miro.com for digital whiteboards.
I use dramaqueen, which is an extensive screenwriting software, but very expensive if you buy the full version. I like how you can combine plot layer, treatment, screenplay and scene description. I love to import scripts and break them down in there.
But final draft also has many great features that are worth exploring. The benefit of doing as much as possible in your screenwriting software is that your project file will be tidier.
If you have the space, I would recommend doing most of it analogue with index cards.