You’re a talented graphics artist. Photoshop
trembles at your touch. Take your art to the next level by turning
static graphics into interactive prototypes with
a few mouse clicks. That’s what PhotoProto
does. It walks through your Photoshop file, exports all those carefully
crafted images and references them in a file that the PhotoProto
player displays. But this goes way beyond graphics.
You simply name and arrange your layers and PhotoProto automatically
assigns the appropriate behavior. Name a layer “button”
and the images can be pressed like a button in the player. Name
a set of screens, and a multi-view application comes alive. It’s
incredibly easy. See for yourself with our free
trial.
“I've always spent a lot of time writing text documents
describing where each button should be, how objects should
work... Now – with PhotoProto – it's just few
clicks and I have a functional GUI prototype. All without
leaving Photoshop – simply great!”
Use Adobe
Photoshop to
create your artwork. Name layers with GUI keywords and PhotoProto
automatically creates a fully-functional interactive prototype.
Companies like Chrysler, Visteon
and Ford are already using PhotoProto for next
generation dash displays and in-car infotainment, audio and navigation.
They are taking their art off of the drawing board and into the
boardroom. Try it risk free
and see for yourself how they’re supercharging their Photoshop
graphics.
You want to try and sell your concept
to decision makers? Pulling that meeting-bound manager out of the
hallway for 2 minutes to look over your shoulder while you change
the visibility of layers in Photoshop isn’t going to do it.
Decision makers love the cool graphics and the
gee-whiz innovations, but they just don’t have the imagination
to visualize how great it could be. And who can blame them? Don’t
undermine your slick interface with a clunky presentation. Now,
if your manager could get his hands on the interface when he has
some time – push buttons and navigate through screens –
he’d be blown away. This is cool stuff.
Want to get an idea of what
PhotoProto can do? Check out some interactive demos right
here.
If
you want to go beyond prototyping, PhotoProto’s
XML and perfectly trimmed PNGs (bitmap graphics) can be instantly
imported into other products in the Altia
tool chain. You can also pass these assets off to your programmers
who can integrate them into their code. The choice is yours. Either
way, what you design ends up in the final product exactly as you’ve
built it – not mangled by the idiosyncrasies of programming
languages.
One thing is for sure: when you see PhotoProto
slice and dice your images and export them into a directory (with
alpha channels intact), you’ll never want to do it by hand
again. We’ll even let you try
it, risk free.
Are there any alternatives to the PhotoProto approach?
You might be able to find a willing programmer at your company who
will build the prototype by writing code. But, let’s face
it, this is a guy with other duties and he will have to squeeze
the project in wherever he can. If he’s to get it done at
all, he’ll have to use whatever widgets he has handy. You’ll
end up with an uninspiring approximation of the prototype that looks
and feels like a mundane, typical desktop GUI, not a great user
interface.
Another approach is to outsource to a foreign technical
team. They’ll have the cheap manpower to create a prototype,
possibly even including your assets. The downside? If you’ve
ever tried to describe what you want to the guy in the next building,
you’ll have an inkling of the potential miscommunication nightmare
you’re in for. Language barriers and unclear specifications
(you like writing long, detailed specs, don’t you?) create
late, costly prototypes that miss the mark. Cheap manpower isn’t
so cheap after all.
If you’re lucky enough to have a web guru
with multimedia authoring talents in your midst, there’s a
third avenue. When he gets free time, he might be able to put together
a prototype for you. But he’s a valuable resource and is in
high demand. Everyone is trying to get a slice of his time and he
is likely booked for weeks, if not months. You need the prototype
today. In fact, you need a dozen versions of it today. (By the way,
if you are that guru, PhotoProto gives you an opportunity to satisfy
your clamoring colleagues in the short term – leaving the
detailed multimedia development effort for projects that demand
it.)
For all these alternatives, the creative time you
spend on the prototype is dwarfed by the time you spend finding
resources, writing specifications, explaining features and micro-managing
the prototype development. Rather than getting out a few prototypes
every 6 months, PhotoProto lets you get dozens of prototypes within
days.
PhotoProto is the tool that gets your ideas
air time – uncompromised by what a programmer finds easiest
to implement. Your new concepts can have tremendous impact if they
are easy to share and understand. PhotoProto maximizes your
contribution to the success of your product and your company.
Want to see PhotoProto in action? We have a quick video that shows
just how easy it is.
Testimonials
“The product is well-produced
and easy to use, which is hard to achieve.
I design a lot of multimedia as well as traditional
print and web designs, and I have always worked in Flash –
but sometimes that requires complex work just to make simple
interfaces and interactivity. What I see in PhotoProto is
a way to create solid, interactive multimedia without the
complexity that it normally demands – PhotoProto's methods
are that slick.
I've seen applications before that work within
Photoshop to create functional websites, Flash or other interactive
media that requires programming, and more often than not it
doesn't hold up to the old methods – but I think PhotoProto
does, and that opens doors for a lot to Photoshop users everywhere
who are trying to break into multimedia creation. If that
isn't a jolt to the industry, I don't know what is.”
“I had to develop a prototype of automotive
instrument panel features in short order. What would have
taken me weeks through an outside design house was done in
two days.”
“Without PhotoProto,
I would have to mock up interfaces with HTML. That's a lot
of HTML coding, and setting up tables to get around the browser's
positioning idiosyncrasies, and the bookkeeping for all the
little icons is a nightmare – especially if there are
a lot of design refinements. With PhotoProto, it's all done
in PhotoShop. There isn't the delay in going from idea to
demo while you make a bunch of icons and modify your HTML
code. You just make the changes in the PhotoShop layers, run
the PhotoProto script, and you can quickly see the results.
PhotoProto eliminates the delay in going
from idea to prototype. Instead of wasting time coding up
a prototype interface, you just set up your layers in PhotoShop,
and PhotoProto does the rest.”
- Lynn Grant
Castle Development Group
“Wow, this is exactly the type of tool
that I have been looking for, not only for personal use, but
for my clients as well. I tested PhotoProto with Smart Objects
as well as PNG and vector based graphics and to my surprise
it all worked flawlessly!! I'm blown away!”
Photoshop
Roadmap - “PhotoProto is a new, and as far as I know,
never done before Photoshop plugin. It’s an unique concept
that eliminates the pain of creating user-driven interfaces prototypes.”
FDLC
- “Altia PhotoProto is an excellent tool that will transform
your Adobe Photoshop artwork into working GUIs.”
Designorati:Photoshop
- “PhotoProto allows for interactive buttons, sliders, knobs
and wheels and supports media including images, music files, video
(both live and not) and 3-D graphics, and can manipulate these
in remarkable ways.”
Screen Online - “An interesting Photoshop
Plugin named “PhotoProto” [by] Altia (Windows, MacOS
X) permits the production of interactive prototypes for demo purposes.”
Synaptic
Burn - “Altia has created a new Photoshop plug-in, called
PhotoProto, that helps people make prototypes. I know a lot of
designers live in Photoshop and this tool can be really helpful.”
Mac-NN
- “The plug-in requires no scripting language or complex
authoring environment knowledge, and the output is presentable
to engineers as well as programmers who can use it directly within
the desired software.”