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  1. You have just heard about the site and want to start using it yourself!  Register an account and upload an item of your wardrobe to the website. We have provided a folder of some clothes from your hypothetical wardrobe in a folder on the computer's desktop. (note: in the paper prototype we had users utilize the mobile app for this task.  We made the final design decision not to make such an app, and thus all this functionality is on the website itself) 
  2. You have a job interview tomorrow but don't know what to wear!  Request advice for an outfit and after waiting for "20 minutes" review peoples' responses to your question. (note: in the paper prototype we had users up/down vote their favorite outfits.  We removed this feature in our final design).
  3. Your friend Felicity Knave has her his first day of work tomorrow, and doesn't know what to wear!  Luckily shehe's a registered user on outfit.me.  Go onto the site, find her his question, and post suggest an outfit for her to wearhim. Feel free to browse other users' suggestions for inspiration.

Users

User 1 - 23-year-old female, MIT Graduate Student
User 2 - 19-year-old male, MIT Undergraduate.Student
User 3 -  20-year-old female, MIT Undergraduate Student

Testing

Reflection

Discuss what you learned over the course of the iterative design process. If you did it again, what would you do differently? Focus in this part not on the specific design decisions of your project (which you already discussed in the Design section), but instead on the meta-level decisions about your design process: your risk assessments, your decisions about what features to prototype and which prototype techniques to use, and how you evaluated the results of your observations.