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Jul 02 '10 at 13:04

John%20L%20Taylor's gravatar image

John L Taylor
61541518

I think that this presentation does a decent job. First, it shows the process abstractly, yet simply as a sequential process, and then it gives a specific example. It would not be difficult to substitute in portions of the abstract diagram, and tune the example to a more illustrative query. Was something like this what you had in mind?

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Jul 07 '10 at 16:12

John%20L%20Taylor's gravatar image

John L Taylor
61541518

I think that this presentation does a decent job. First, it shows the process abstractly, yet simply as a sequential process, and then it gives a specific example. It would not be difficult to substitute in portions of the abstract diagram, and tune the example to a more illustrative query. Was something like this what you had in mind?

EDIT: Given the clarification posted below, this is easy enough to do in PowerPoint (banal, though it may be). In a document, you might have to settle for a sequential strip (in comic-like form; frame 1, frame 2, etc.) or a UML-style sequence diagram that labels the swim lanes with something like 'User at time t'.

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