Macromedia Authorware 6: Training from the Source | 
enlarge | Authors: Orson Kellog, Veera Bhatnagar Publisher: Macromedia Press Category: Book
List Price: $49.99 Buy Used: $0.99 You Save: $49.00 (98%)
New (2) Used (16) from $0.99
Avg. Customer Rating: 6 reviews Sales Rank: 466425
Media: Paperback Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 568 Shipping Weight (lbs): 3.5 Dimensions (in): 10 x 8 x 1.2
ISBN: 0201774267 Dewey Decimal Number: 006 UPC: 785342774269 EAN: 9780201774269 ASIN: 0201774267
Publication Date: December 28, 2001 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: Expedited shipping available Shipping: International shipping available Condition: Standard used condition.
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Product Description
Macromedia Authorware's accessible, icon-based development environmentmakes it a favorite of developers who create sophisticated interactiveprojects, from multimedia presentations to computer-based trainingprograms. Whether you're new to Authorware or upgrading from a previousversion, Macromedia Authorware 6: Training from the Source providesexactly what the title promises: project-based lessons modeled onMacromedia's own training courses. With Macromedia Authorware 6: Training from the Source, you learnthe basics of Authorware by doing. The hands-on tutorials that form thecore of this workbook and CD-ROM package take you step-by-step throughreal-world interactive projects. Each lesson covers a specific topic, suchas adding motion and sound to your project, working with templates andknowledge objects, and incorporating Flash and XML into your projects. Thisedition of the book covers what's new in Authorware 6, including the "onebutton publishing" feature. The CD-ROM holds all the files you need to workthrough the lessons, plus a full-featured, time-limited version ofAuthorware 6.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 1 more reviews...
What an absolute waste of time and money May 29, 2005 6 out of 6 found this review helpful
I can't believe I kept going...it just got worse and worse. The lessons in this package are confusing, poorly organized and very light on actual training content. It sends you through a bunch of steps but really doesn't teach you what you are doing. Yes, at times it expounds on the basis of certain steps but overall it does a poor job explaining the processes it is trying to teach. Worst of all, it only covers a bunch of relatively basic steps and doesn't spend any time going into more important tasks or, for that matter, tying together the simple things it does try to teach you.
While I wasn't too impressed with the tutorial in the Authoware help section, it was better than this program. Best of all, that one is FREE.
In my quest to learn Authorware 7, I had much better success with the following options:
1) Authorware 6 VTC Training CD 2) The AWARE user's list 3) The Macromedia User's guides.
One final suggestion - get Michael Allen's Guide to E-Learning - while not specific to Authorware it is a GREAT resource for planning and developing the programs you're going to design in Authorware.
This package, however, is about as valuable as the 2 dozen AOL disks I get in the mail every month. Save your money for good resources because while Authoware is a great program - its way to tough to learn with good resources much less bad one like this.
Poor organised and very uneven in quality October 21, 2003 6 out of 6 found this review helpful
This is quite a poorly organised book. Certainly I found it sloppy and longwinded in equal measure. Is anyone editing these Training from the Source books, I asked myself. In any training manual. a good mental model should be easily extracted. This is far from the case here. The manual and tutorials that accompany Authorware are preferable to this volume's offerings. It is simply too erratic and patchy to meet the objective set in the title. I would not recommend it.
Step by step, but very confusing June 3, 2003 10 out of 10 found this review helpful
I am a corporate trainer whose classroom courses are extremely popular. It is time for me to move them into a Web environment.This book does take you in bite size steps through the use of Authorware. But as a trainer, I find it enormously confusing in its organization, in the information it leaves out and in its inconsistencies. A quick example: the end of the second chapter shows you how to create within the software the sections for your course, and the pages within each of those sections. It then shows you how to open one of those pages and tells you that you'll learn to put content onto that page in the following chapter. But the following chapter shows you creating content in completely different windows located in a completely different part of the software than the windows you were looking at when the previous chapter left off. Bottom line - - I sat with this book for three days, did all of the tutorials in the first seven chapters but still did not understand where to begin to create a course from scratch on my own. Full of far too much 'tech talk' the book needs to teach people how to use Authorware to create courses, etc. from a blank slate NOT from pre-created sound, text files etc parked in specific places that you are easily guided to. I will still need a much better written text, or some classroom instruction, to get my project out the door.
I Like the Book - Thorough Explanations April 7, 2003 2 out of 5 found this review helpful
The authors do what I feel a good instructor should do - they move systematically from chapter to chapter expanding on knowledge gained in previous chapters, giving lots of explanations as to why you need to do things a certain way. This builds confidence and competency with the software. I am new to Authorware and feel this book is giving me a firm foundation for thoroughly understanding the software. I recommend the book to anyone starting with Authorware without reservation.
Not a Reference Manual October 20, 2002 6 out of 6 found this review helpful
If you're looking for a comprehensive Authorware manual this is NOT the book. If you want an introductory series of step-by-step guided tutorials it's OK, IMHO.I have been using Orson Kellogg's Ver 5 book in the classroom and for on-line teaching. I like it because the students can work at their own pace and leaves me free to offer personalized guidance. My students typically finish the book exercises in 5-6 weeks (about 25-30 lab hours). It provides objectives at the start and end of each chapter and has a few multimedia development tips sprinkled through the book (though not nearly enough). If it has a weakness as a learning tool, some students do the steps but do not retain what they have just done. I need to provide challenges throughout the semester to get them to think on their own. Once students have done the exercizes the book is useless because it has no reference tools. It lacks appendices for common variables and system functions, for example. I agree with the previous writer that it fails to come even close to unleashing the power of Authorware. As a classroom tool I may continue to use it because every student at every level has been able to use it successfully.
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