| Authors: |
David R. Millen
and Jonathan Feinberg
and Bernard Kerr
|
| URL: |
http://portal.acm.org/citation.cfm?id=1124792 |
| Description: |
Dogear |
| Tags: |
bookmarking
imported
social
|
| Abstract: |
We describe a social bookmarking service de-signed for a large enterprise. We discuss design principles addressing online identity, privacy, information discovery (including search and pivot browsing), and service extensi-bility based on a web-friendly architectural style. In addi-tion we describe the key design features of our implementa-tion. We provide the results of an eight week field trial of this enterprise social bookmarking service, including a de-scription of user activities, based on log file analysis. We share the results of a user survey focused on the benefits of the service. The feedback from the user trial, comprising survey results, log file analysis and informal communica-tions, is quite positive and suggests several promising en-hancements to the service. Finally, we discuss potential extension and integration of social bookmarking services with other corporate collaborative applications. |
@inproceedings{1124792,
title = {Dogear: Social bookmarking in the enterprise},
address = {New York, NY, USA},
author = {David R. Millen and Jonathan Feinberg and Bernard Kerr},
booktitle = {CHI '06: Proceedings of the SIGCHI conference on Human Factors in computing systems},
pages = {111--120},
publisher = {ACM Press},
url = {http://portal.acm.org/citation.cfm?id=1124792},
year = {2006},
description = {Dogear},
abstract = {We describe a social bookmarking service de-signed for a large enterprise. We discuss design principles addressing online identity, privacy, information discovery (including search and pivot browsing), and service extensi-bility based on a web-friendly architectural style. In addi-tion we describe the key design features of our implementa-tion. We provide the results of an eight week field trial of this enterprise social bookmarking service, including a de-scription of user activities, based on log file analysis. We share the results of a user survey focused on the benefits of the service. The feedback from the user trial, comprising survey results, log file analysis and informal communica-tions, is quite positive and suggests several promising en-hancements to the service. Finally, we discuss potential extension and integration of social bookmarking services with other corporate collaborative applications.},
doi = {http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/1124772.1124792}, isbn = {1-59593-372-7}, location = {Montr\&\#233;al, Qu\&\#233;bec, Canada},
keywords = {bookmarking imported social }
}