Shared physical workspaces allow people to maintain upto-
the minute knowledge about others’ interaction with the
workspace. This knowledge is workspace awareness, part
of the glue that allows groups to collaborate effectively. In
this paper, we present the concept of workspace awareness
as a key for groupware systems that wish to support the
fluid interaction evident in face-to-face collaboration. We
discuss why workspace awareness is difficult to support in
groupware systems, and then present a conceptual
framework that groupware designers can use as a starting
point for thinking about and supporting awareness.
Description
Workspace awareness for groupware - lists elements of awareness
%0 Conference Paper
%1 257284
%A Gutwin, Carl
%A Greenberg, Saul
%B CHI '96: Conference companion on Human factors in computing systems
%C New York, NY, USA
%D 1996
%I ACM
%K awareness
%P 208--209
%R http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/257089.257284
%T Workspace awareness for groupware
%U http://portal.acm.org/citation.cfm?id=257089.257284
%X Shared physical workspaces allow people to maintain upto-
the minute knowledge about others’ interaction with the
workspace. This knowledge is workspace awareness, part
of the glue that allows groups to collaborate effectively. In
this paper, we present the concept of workspace awareness
as a key for groupware systems that wish to support the
fluid interaction evident in face-to-face collaboration. We
discuss why workspace awareness is difficult to support in
groupware systems, and then present a conceptual
framework that groupware designers can use as a starting
point for thinking about and supporting awareness.
%@ 0-89791-832-0
@inproceedings{257284,
abstract = {Shared physical workspaces allow people to maintain upto-
the minute knowledge about others’ interaction with the
workspace. This knowledge is workspace awareness, part
of the glue that allows groups to collaborate effectively. In
this paper, we present the concept of workspace awareness
as a key for groupware systems that wish to support the
fluid interaction evident in face-to-face collaboration. We
discuss why workspace awareness is difficult to support in
groupware systems, and then present a conceptual
framework that groupware designers can use as a starting
point for thinking about and supporting awareness.},
added-at = {2008-06-24T18:55:55.000+0200},
address = {New York, NY, USA},
author = {Gutwin, Carl and Greenberg, Saul},
biburl = {https://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/2de62a66ad06d9960e10588fa35988f4f/boehr},
booktitle = {CHI '96: Conference companion on Human factors in computing systems},
description = {Workspace awareness for groupware - lists elements of awareness},
doi = {http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/257089.257284},
interhash = {a3cc913ca9c9ee473e848ccf2b4dd67c},
intrahash = {de62a66ad06d9960e10588fa35988f4f},
isbn = {0-89791-832-0},
keywords = {awareness},
location = {Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada},
pages = {208--209},
publisher = {ACM},
timestamp = {2008-06-24T18:55:55.000+0200},
title = {Workspace awareness for groupware},
url = {http://portal.acm.org/citation.cfm?id=257089.257284},
year = 1996
}