The flow chart I chose was flowchart.com and the mind map I chose was Bubbl.us. The Bubbl.us allowed me to start right away with the creation was immediate. I did not like having to wait all day to use the flowchat.com but I like the design of it better, so I’d assume wait for what I perceived to be the better quality product and that was the case.
The mind maps were dead on with what the lesson said, easy to create but hard to read and it was hard for me to understand what I had created so I likely wont utilize those much, but the editing process and creation tools were really simple and user friendly.
The flow chart was a breeze to construct once I got in. The great thing about flow chart.com is that you can choose your template and it has like family tree and SWOT analysis, you can preselect the direction of the chart and the number of tiers if you know how many you need to start but you can also add and delete. You can add multiple charts to the same sheet like in Excel. The tools at the top are pretty straight forward and you can glaze the mouse over to find out what each one means, some of the icons I had never seen before like snap grid and script editor. This is something I will definitely revisit for future projects. One thing I can definitely see this be used for is in history to show the branches of government (i.e. legislative, executive, and judicial and the duties of each).
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