Getting started

Creating an interactive scenario with Near-Life CREATOR is easy and in this tutorial we’re going to show you how to get up and running in a few quick steps.

Before you begin

To complete this tutorial, you’ll need to download a few media assets first.

Download the media for this exercise here

Steps

  1. When you login you’ll see your Projects area, this is where you organise and save all of your Projects.  You can have an unlimited number of projects and each project can have unlimited scenarios.
  2. To add a new Project, click the white box Create project+ box.
  3. Name your project and save – you can change the name of your project by selecting the Project button (in your Project) and clicking Edit.
  4. Click ‘add new scenario’ 
  5. This takes you to the Scenario Settings page. This is where you set your scenario defaults. Scenario Settings are explained in more detail here.
  6. When you Save your settings, you’ll be taken to the Canvas.
  7. The Canvas is where you design, build, test and publish your scenario.
  8. The small box you can see in the Canvas is a Node.  This is your starting Node.
    1. A Node is a container or placeholder for your media and interactions.
  9. You can create scenarios with video, images or slides. For this quick example, we’re going to create a scenario with video.
  10. Click the Upload Media button to upload your media.
  11. This Upload Media window allows you to set the thumbnail that will appear in the media library and in the Node when you’re on the Canvas. Simply drag the playhead across. Once you’re happy with all your clip thumbnails, click upload.
  12. For this tutorial, we’re going to create a simple branching scenario using buttons.
  13. Click edit in the first node to get started.
  14. The Node title is used in the end report so give it a meaningful name, something that the end user will understand.
  15. You can add a description, it’s optional, but it comes in very handy if you want to storyboard your scenario before creating your media.
  16. Since we’ve already uploaded video files, you can select video from the Type drop-down list and then choose the correct file from the Media drop-down list. In this example, we’ve called our first file Choose a destination so it matches the node name and is easy to locate.
  17. The video format defaults to 2D, but if you’re working with VR media, you can change the format here. See Working with VR.
  18. Since we’re working with video, the duration is already set. But when you work with non-video media, you have the option to set a duration. This is how long the node will appear on the front end.  See Working with Slides and Images as media.
  19. You can decide what happens when this clip ends if the end user doesn’t complete an interaction. To set a default, choose a node title or <New Node> from the On end, jump to: drop down list. Setting a <New Node> creates the container where you’ll add the media – you won’t see this Node until you’re back in the Canvas.
  20. If you want to tell your users how much time they have to make a decision, tick enable Media countdown. It will automatically be set to the default countdown that you set in Scenario Settings. You can override the default by moving the slider.
  21. To add an interaction, you need to add an overlay. Overlays can be text, images, hotspots or buttons. For this exercise, we’ll create button so select the button group option.
  22. Overlay name – you can rename the Overlay here. See Using Overlays for more tips.
  23. Button text – Enter your button text here. For this example, type: City break
  24. Jump to Node – Select <New Node> to create a placeholder for the outcome Media
  25. Feedback – Enter some feedback about this choice, it will appear in the end of scenario report that the end user sees.
  26. Score – we did not set a score in Scenario Settings so you can ignore this for now. See Scoring
  27. Add a Button – this example needs three buttons, one for each outcome destination, so you need to add two more buttons. Click the “Add new button” button.
  28. Repeat steps 23-26 for each button. Name one button “Sun, sea and sand” and the other “Winter getaway”
  29. Save
  30. In the Canvas, you should be able to see five nodes.
  31. You can now click on the Media Library button in the Canvas to drag and drop the media from the Media Library into the nodes.
  32. Test – to test the Scenario, and make sure the buttons do what you expect, click on the Play button in the top right corner of the Canvas.
  33. Use the playbar in the preview screen to skip ahead in the Scenario.
  34. Once you are happy with that the Scenario plays as expected. Close the preview player to return to the Canvas and hit the Publish button.
  35. You’ll see that the Share and Analytics buttons are now active. Click on the Share button and copy the embed code or link for sharing.
  36. That’s it!