Links > Website Documentation
This website was constructed in the fall quarter of 2006 in partial fulfilment of the course requirements for Ect 455, E-Commerce Website Engineering, at DePaul University's School of Computer Science, Telecommunications and Information Systems. The website team members were Yassen AbdEl-Baki, Joel Calderone, Tim Elston, and Harry Saito.
Below is a list of documents created during planning, design, and construction. All documents are in PDF format and require the Adobe Acrobat Reader. The reader may be downloaded for free at Adobe.com.
Team Charter Statement (Deliverable A)
This document contains information about the team members.
Business Case Statement (Deliverable B)
The business case statement covers value propositions, the business model, and market competition and intended customer analyses. It presents a rationale for using an Internet solution and provides a preliminary report on technical requirements.
Analysis and Specifications Document (Deliverable C)
This paper documents specifications analysis and goals, site content, structure and interpretation, sensorial design, transaction flow processing, and planning for market testing.
Web Site Content Abstracts (Deliverable D)
Deliverable D comprised detailed design and page content prototypes. The design prototypes underlie the final design that visitors to this site now enjoy. The web site content abstracts are here offered as originally conceived. and
Advertising Options (Deliverable D)
Another component of Deliverable D was a draft of considerations for advertising options. Preliminary considerations regarding the advertising of SwiftAid.org on the open market are considered in this paper.
Technical and Budget Feasibility Report (Deliverable E)
This report contains considerations and decisions regarding web hosting options, electronic payment systems and security, criteria for web site success and budget feasibility.
Tools and Usability Testing Report (Deliverable F)
This report documents the tools used to develop the SwiftAid.org project, the technical problems encountered and the solutions developed for those problems. It also contains a report of usability testing.