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Archive for the ‘ScreenSteps Desktop’ Category

ScreenSteps 2.1.1 Released - Blog Pages and Confluence Posting

Wednesday, July 16th, 2008

Last night we released version 2.1.1 of ScreenSteps Standard and Pro. Here are some of the highlights:

  • Text undo has been improved.
  • You can now post ScreenSteps lessons as pages on WordPress, TypePad or Movable Type blogs.
  • In ScreenSteps Pro you can now post to a Confluence wiki.

A couple of other minor fixes and improvements that you can read about in the release notes.

You can download the latest updates by selecting Help > Check for Updates in ScreenSteps or by downloading it here.

You can also watch a quick video of posting a lesson to Confluence below.

Posting to Drupal

Thursday, July 10th, 2008

With the release of version 2.1 we have had a number of requests about whether or not ScreenSteps can post to Drupal. Since Drupal has an API for posting blog entries you can. I’ve posted a lesson on how to configure Drupal and ScreenSteps: Posting to Drupal. I’ve also included the lesson with this post.

There was a small code change that I had to make to Drupal in order for categories to work. I explain the change in the lesson and have filed a bug report that you can review here if you are interested: http://drupal.org/node/280685.

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ScreenSteps Gets 5-Cow Rating From Tucows

Monday, July 7th, 2008

Just wanted to let you know that last week ScreenSteps received a 5-cow rating from Tucows.com. Those aren’t easy to come by so we were quite excited. The best part: we got 7 out of 7 for our documentation. It would have been pretty embarrassing if we hadn’t.

Tucows

Simplify Your Documentation

Tuesday, July 1st, 2008

In this post I am going to show you a very simple way to get your documentation done using ScreenSteps. Your results may be a little different than what you are used to but if you follow this approach you will find that your manual will be much easier to create and much easier for your users to read.

You can also see a video that covers the same information here.

Answer Questions

What is the purpose of your manual? In most cases the purpose of the manual is to make it so that your user does not have to email or call you to find out how to do something. That really is the point, but few manuals are written with this in mind. I see a lot of manuals that talk about the philosophy of a product or the architecture behind it. I personally have never had a tech support email or call come in that asked me about the philosophy, the design or architecture of a product. Tech support calls usually start with "How do I …?"

Well, if we are trying to decrease support requests with our documentation then we should probably answer the questions that our customers have. The good news is that actually makes your documentation a lot easier to create.

To show you how to do this I am going to create a manual on how to use WordPress. Now, I am not going to actually complete the entire manual but I will show you how I would scope things out. Once you have things scoped out in ScreenSteps it is actually very easy to go back and fill in the lessons you have outlined.

Create a New Manual

First I will create a new manual in ScreenSteps.

And give it a name.

Now I have a manual with nothing in it. To get things started I am just going to write down the questions that people might ask. Each question will be a new lesson. I don’t really need to do any planning at this point. I am just going to write down the questions as I think of them. (Note: You may prefer to do this in your favorite outline application first but I will show it in ScreenSteps).

To do this in ScreenSteps just select the New Lesson icon.

Here you can see that I have a list of questions that a user might ask. Now, as I look at these, some, like "How do I Upload a File?" are pretty easy to answer in just a few steps. But some, like "How do I Install WordPress?" might take a little more explanation.

For my next step I am going to organize these a bit. Some of the questions I will split into new multiple lessons to make them a little easier to create. I personally hate creating long lessons. They are a pain to make and boring to read.

Lessons Reorganized

Here you can see how I have reorganized things a bit. I have created a couple of sections (1) and have organized the lessons underneath each section (2).

Fill in the Lessons

Now, all I need to do is go back and fill in the lessons. Since the lesson title is a question it is really easy for me to decide what I need to do. I just need to create a lesson that answers the question. Once I am done, I might rename the lessons a bit. For example, I might change "How do I Upload a File?" to "Uploading a File to WordPress" but that is largely a matter of personal preference.

Conclusion

That is pretty much all their is to it. Try it out for yourself. I think that you will find that in afternoon you can have some pretty complete documentation that will be easy to create, easy to read and will be easy to update in the future.

If you want to get really fancy, then try this with ScreenSteps Live. Then, whenever a customer asks a question that you didn’t cover in your manual you can just add the answer to your online manual. We have been doing that for about 6 months now and it has worked really well.

What’s New in 2.1

Friday, June 27th, 2008

ScreenSteps 2.1 is finally released! It has taken awhile but we think that you are really going to like this update. I just wanted to highlight a few of the key enhancements in ScreenSteps 2.1, namely:

  • The Post to Blog feature
  • Improved PDF output
  • Improved PDF manuals

Post to Blog

One of the most exciting things about 2.1 is the new Post to Blog feature. You can now post to your WordPress, TypePad or Movable Type blog. Just go into your ScreenSteps preferences, create a new web account, choose the account type and you will be all ready to post lessons instantly to your blog. You can even choose which category you would like your post to appear in, or publish the lesson as a draft. If you like to create tutorials for people we think that you will find this to be a great way to get your lessons out.

IMPORTANT: If you were using the 2.1 beta you will want to update your blog templates to the new defaults. You can see how to do that here: Updating Templates

Improved PDF

We have also dramatically improved the PDF quality. In previous versions of ScreenSteps some images could appear a little blurry. In 2.1 this has really been improved. Look at these two PDF files. See the examples below.

Old PDF Output

Notice the blurriness in the header image and the screen capture.

2.1 PDF Output

Here you can see how much clearer the PDF export is.

Improved PDF Manuals

For users of ScreenSteps 2 Pro we have also really improved PDF manuals. In ScreenSteps 2.0 you could export a PDF manual but the cover page and table of contents looked a little shabby.

In 2.1 you can now add an image and footer to your title page and the table of contents now has better formatting and page numbers.

Title Page

Here you can see the new options for the title page. You can now add a footer and image.

Improved Table of Contents

This is the new PDF table of contents. The formatting has been cleaned up and page numbers are now included.

Conclusion

There are also a lot of bug fixes and small improvements. We hope you like all of the additions.

You can download the latest version by selecting “Check For Updates” from the Help menu in ScreenSteps or by going to our Downloads page.

ScreenSteps 2.1 b48 Public Beta

Wednesday, June 11th, 2008

We posted another build of the 2.1 public beta today. Lots of bug fixes and a couple of enhancements. We are getting very near release so if you have any issues to report please send them into support using the Help->Email Feedback menu option.

  • You can now customize the title page of a PDF manual.
  • You can now specify the horizontal alignment of the PDF header logo.
  • When posting to a blog account the last blog and category are saved and used the next time you post a lesson to a blog for the first time.
  • Added %LessonTags% to the lesson HTML templates.
  • You can now cancel PDF export.
  • You can now cancel HTML export.
  • A step image would retain focus visually if the step did not have focus when selecting another step.
  • Fixed a bug where the application database could fail to initialize on Windows if ScreenSteps was launched in quick succession by double-clicking on a file that opened ScreenSteps.
  • Better error detection for supported files when selecting graphics for use in PDF templates.
  • UI tweaks in toolbars.
  • When posting to a blog account the last template used is saved and used the next time you post a lesson to the blog.
  • Tidied up the annotation inspector controls.

You can use Help->Check for Updates… or you can download the installers here:

Download 2.1 Beta for Windows

Download 2.1 Beta for Mac

New ScreenSteps 2.1 Public Beta

Monday, June 2nd, 2008

Over the weekend we released an update to the 2.1 public beta. This update includes further enhancements to the new post to blog feature as well as the long awaited improvement to image quality in PDF files when viewing at actual size. We have also improved support for proxy servers. You should now be prompted for your proxy server username and password if a proxy server is detected.

You will also see a new Welcome Center window when you first launch ScreenSteps. In our company blog you can read about how we are using some new features of ScreenSteps Live to do this.

For those of you wondering, posting to a blog using the https protocol does not work reliably yet.

You can use Help->Check for Updates… or you can download the installers here:

Download 2.1 Beta for Windows

Download 2.1 Beta for Mac

Here is a list of changes:

  • New Welcome Center.
  • Images in PDF output are no longer fuzzy at actual size.
  • Export to blog now supports accounts with multiple blogs.
  • Export to blog now allows you to assign a category to a lesson.
  • Lesson tags are now posted to blogs.
  • You can now publish a lesson to a blog as a draft.
  • Added authentication dialog for proxy servers.
  • Tooltip now appears when hovering over URLs in fields.
  • Improved error handling when posting to ScreenSteps Live.
  • Editing fields resize correctly again.
  • Lesson color in topic outline now updates correctly depending on whether you add or delete steps while editing.
  • Fixed a bug where the step instructions editing field would lose focus when tabbing from a step title field to step instructions, the step title had been changed and the user had “Sync Image Names to Step Titles” enabled in preferences.
  • Better ScreenSteps Live error reporting when logging in.
  • If you exported a PDF document using a template with a logo, removed the logo from the template and then exported again the header of the PDF was still allotting space for the logo.
  • Fixed a possible divide by zero error when viewing a lesson.
  • Finally got rid of the 1 pixel offset that would occur in the Tags/Manuals lists when they were first populated.

Updates to ScreenSteps Live: The Direction ScreenSteps Live is Moving In

Monday, May 19th, 2008

Over the weekend we posted some updates to ScreenSteps Live. This is the start to a slightly different direction for ScreenSteps Live so we wanted to let you know what we have been doing and where we are going.

When ScreenSteps Live was originally launched it was really just a place to post ScreenSteps lessons. It was somewhat like a blog for ScreenSteps lessons.

The problem we found for our customers, and for ourselves, was that we didn’t want to have yet “another” blog for tutorials. So we really didn’t end up using ScreenSteps Live that way. ScreenSteps Live for us, and for many of our customers, became a place to support users by creating online manuals. But not a place to just occasionally post lessons.

We could see this in our customer usage. Our customers that were using ScreenSteps Live as a customer support tool were posting a lot of lessons and posting very regularly. Those who were just using it as a kind of blog only posted occasionally.

With this realization we have made a few changes to ScreenSteps Live. I don’t want to say that we are relaunching ScreenSteps Live but we are definitely heading in a slightly different direction.

Quick List of Changes

Here is a quick list of the changes launched this weekend:
  1. No more front page lessons - There are no longer lessons available at the main screenstepslive.com site. If users want to see your lessons then they must specifically go to your account. For example, ours is bmls.screenstepslive.com.
  2. Embed full manuals into your website - You can now embed the table of contents for a complete manual into your own website or web app. Just copy some javascript code and insert it into your web page. The table of contents will appear on your own web page and will update each time you change your manual on ScreenSteps Live. This gives you the benefit of the ease of use of ScreenSteps Live while still having the manual table of contents appear on your site. Once the user clicks on a link in your manual they will be taken to the lesson on ScreenSteps Live. Here is a lesson on how to do it: Embedding Manuals.
  3. Updated Plans - The available plans have changed slightly. The main change has come to the free plan. Before the free plan was just a place to post ScreenSteps Live lessons. If that is all you want to do then we really suggest that you use ScreenSteps 2.1 with a blog service such as WordPress or TypePad. The new free plan is really a chance for you to try out the features available on ScreenSteps Live for customer support.
If you already have a free plan nothing will change for you. You still have the same plan that you had before. The updated free plans only affect new users of ScreenSteps Live.

A More Detailed Look At The Changes and Where ScreenSteps Live is Going

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ScreenSteps 2.1 Public Beta: Post to Blog

Monday, April 28th, 2008

Update 5/07/2008: Added screencast showing blog uploading.

Download URLS for 2.1 Beta:

Download Beta 2.1 for Windows

Download Beta 2.1 for Mac

We just wanted to announce that ScreenSteps 2.1 public beta is available. A couple of big changes in this one.

Post to WordPress, TypePad or Movable Type

First, the most exciting news. You can now publish directly to your own WordPress, TypePad or Movable Type blog using ScreenSteps. You no longer need to have a ScreenSteps Live account to publish to your blog. We think that this is very cool and so have our initial testers, so download the beta and try it out for yourself.

Here is a video showing off the feature:

Topics are now Manuals

The naming of Topics in the UI has been changed to Manuals. This is essentially what Topics are and we think that it will make the whole concept of how to use ScreenSteps much clearer. Why didn’t we call them Manuals from the start? At the time we had good reasons. They don’t seem as good now.

Download the Public Beta

There are a lot of other fixes in the release notes in case you are interested.

Download the public beta and let us know what you think:

Download Beta 2.1 for Windows

Download Beta 2.1 for Mac

You can see a lesson about how to configure the blog settings here.