Allow comments, it means they can comment. We can say at final, if you wanna change the name you can, it's up to you. So, the prototypes you publish or share are gonna be accessed later so you can get to 'em. Every time you publish a prototype and it's saved up to Creative Cloud for you to be able to access, you can get back to that thing later on. As you work on this, as you edit, as you make changes: you could do version one, version two, et cetera. So we could actually create multiple versions. The reason why it's asking you for a name is that maybe you wanna do versions of this. It's gonna say alright, what are we gonna do here. I'm gonna publish the prototype by clicking on publish prototype. So with this file, now what I wanna do is this, I wanna actually take this and share it. And I just wanna give you a flavor of how that works. And there's a couple of pluses to that too if you share it with them, they could actually provide feedback so they can comment. But anybody can view it, they don't need to log in all they need is a browser and the URL essentially and obviously Internet connection to view the actual prototype. It's gonna be viewed in browser, on device, if they want, or maybe on their desktop, that k.
Publish prototype means we can take this prototype that we just created, we can share it with other people, we can actually. We're gonna focus on publish prototype right now. And you're gonna see manage publish links.
You'll see publish prototype, you'll see publish design spec, which actually says beta right now. Now click on share: we will see three things. If you look in the upper right corner, you're gonna see, with the document open obviously, there's a share or a share option. Or even just look at a few screens or flow, you know, that kinda of thing.
Or you wanted somebody to test out the full prototype. Maybe you wanna just send it to somebody to look at the design.
You're gettin' to a point where you're trying it out, you're testing it out and you think it looks pretty good.