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Onekana Overview

Onekana lets you create interactive guides and build applications by dragging markers onto images and graphics and describing them. Your projects can then play back like video, or guide your users step by step.

This quick guide will explain to you how it works.


   

Mark Up 1 to 15 of 15

  • About Onekana
    Onekana is a platform for guides and applications. You can create them here and plug them into your web site and share them.
  • Onekana Advanced
    When things get advanced, you can use onekana to build and help manage your own platform. Essentially though, creating guides and apps with onekana comes down to 3 core steps.
  • Step 1
    Select a mark up pointer from your mark up panel.
  • Step 2
    You drag the marker to the position on the image you want to explain in your guide, or the 'thing' you want to locate. We are using our homepage for this guide.
  • Step 3
    Then you add your information. Repeat steps 1,2 and 3 until you have finished. As we will see, things like sound and media can be added later.
  • Trying the demos.
    You can try this using our home page.
  • Mark up and Playback demos.
    If you scoll down you can try different types. The markers change according to the kind of guide or app. you want to build.
  • This is the simple guide or 'walk-throug...
    It can be used for just about anything: timings and sequencing are handled automatically.
  • Guides and Apps.
    As you scroll down increasingly pointers relate to real 'things' or objects. In the more advanced set ups you are dragging and managing real things along with their data, and not just pointer guides. You are actually building apps. and platforms.
  • Your users can visually search your guid...
    As it gets more advanced, so does the search.
  • Combining a map with a walkthrough
    To finish we are going to combine a map, with a video with a walkthrough. It could just as easily be a site map with properties*, but this is where the idea for onekana came from.
  • We started from Hong Kong.
    It was 1997, an el nino year. There were a lot of storms that spring.
  • We sailed to Okinawa.
    En route we saw dolphins.
  • Yakushima Island
    Tropical Storm Levi forced us to take refuge on Yakushima island, where the trees are as old as 8000 years.
  • Aburatsubo.
    Last stop before Vancouver, Aburatsubo is a naturally hidden harbour. You can follow the walk-through below.

About Onekana

Onekana is a platform for guides and applications. You can create them here and plug them into your web site and share them.

Onekana Advanced

When things get advanced, you can use onekana to build and help manage your own platform. Essentially though, creating guides and apps with onekana comes down to 3 core steps.

Step 1

Select a mark up pointer from your mark up panel.

Step 2

You drag the marker to the position on the image you want to explain in your guide, or the 'thing' you want to locate. We are using our homepage for this guide.

Step 3

Then you add your information. Repeat steps 1,2 and 3 until you have finished. As we will see, things like sound and media can be added later.

Trying the demos.

You can try this using our home page.

Mark up and Playback demos.

If you scoll down you can try different types. The markers change according to the kind of guide or app. you want to build.

This is the simple guide or 'walk-through'.

It can be used for just about anything: timings and sequencing are handled automatically.

Guides and Apps.

As you scroll down increasingly pointers relate to real 'things' or objects. In the more advanced set ups you are dragging and managing real things along with their data, and not just pointer guides. You are actually building apps. and platforms.

Your users can visually search your guide.

As it gets more advanced, so does the search.

Combining a map with a walkthrough

To finish we are going to combine a map, with a video with a walkthrough. It could just as easily be a site map with properties*, but this is where the idea for onekana came from.

* or something with components, or recipe with ingredients...

We started from Hong Kong.

It was 1997, an el nino year. There were a lot of storms that spring.

We sailed to Okinawa.

En route we saw dolphins.

`

Yakushima Island

Tropical Storm Levi forced us to take refuge on Yakushima island, where the trees are as old as 8000 years.

Aburatsubo.

Last stop before Vancouver, Aburatsubo is a naturally hidden harbour. You can follow the walk-through below.

Latest update: 09.02.2018 - Thank you all "feedbackers"...