4 citations found. Retrieving documents...
Jun Rekimoto. TimeScape: A time-machine for the desktop environment. In Proceedings of ACM CHI'99 Extended Abstracts, pages 180--181, 1999.

 Home/Search   Document Details and Download   Summary   Related Articles   Check  

This paper is cited in the following contexts:
Enhancing Data Exploration with a Branching History of User.. - Derthick, Roth   (Correct)

....[2] but there is no space to describe them here. Most undo models represent history as an ordered list of events. An alternative, closer to the way we think about the real world, is that time is the organizing principle and events are landmarks on the real valued time line. Following Rekimoto [3], we call continuous undo time travel. In this view selective undo redo involves replaying intervals of time within or across scenarios. Several previous papers have commented on the possibility of showing the user a scenario tree, and point out that their semantics can handle branching [2, 4] ....

....capability Visage provides is allowing the end user to create custom displays of usage history on the fly. 9.4. Timeline Interfaces In addition to Chimera, described above, there have been several interfaces that rely on timeline visualizations for undo, browsing and or time travel. TimeScape [3] uses a timeline metaphor to organize objects on the computer desktop, rather than the usual folder hierarchy. The existence and position of the objects is recorded. A timeline slider restores earlier states of the desktop s appearance. A document created in the future becomes a reminder, as it ....

Rekimoto, J. TimeScape: A Time Machine for the Desktop Environment. in Human Factors in Computing Systems (SIGCHI). 1999. Pittsburgh, PA: p. 180-181.


Data Exploration across Temporal Contexts - Derthick, Roth (2000)   (1 citation)  (Correct)

....selective undo [2] which there is no space to describe here. Most undo models represent history as an ordered list of events. An alternative, closer to the way we think about the real world, is that time is the organizing principle and events are landmarks on the time line. Following Rekimoto [3], we call non selective undo time travel. In this view selective undo involves replaying intervals of time within or across scenarios. Several previous papers have commented on the possibility of showing the user a scenario tree, and point out that their semantics can handle branching [2, 4] ....

....capability Visage provides is allowing the end user to create custom displays of usage history on the fly. 9.4. Timeline Interfaces In addition to Chimera, described above, there have been several interfaces that rely on timeline visualizations for undo, browsing and or time travel. TimeScape [3] uses a timeline metaphor to organize objects on the computer desktop, rather than the usual folder hierarchy. The existence and position of the objects is recorded. Moving a slider time travels back to earlier states of the desktop s appearance. A document created in the future becomes a ....

Rekimoto, J. TimeScape: A Time Machine for the Desktop Environment. in Human Factors in Computing Systems (SIGCHI) . 1999. Pittsburgh, PA, p. 180-181.


Time-Machine Computing: A Time-centric Approach for the.. - Rekimoto (1999)   (21 citations)  Self-citation (Rekimoto)   (Correct)

....example, pressing the go back button brings the user back to the time just before the most recent desktop change (item creation, deletion, etc. The user can also select one of desktop objects and go to the time that item was created or 1 A brief introduction of TimeScape can also be found in [17]. deleted. As described later, the user can also specify a time point using text search. All modifications of a desktop are archived automatically. When the user feels some documents are not immediately necessary, the user can simply remove them from the desktop by dragging them to the ....

Jun Rekimoto. TimeScape: A time-machine for the desktop environment. In Proceedings of ACM CHI'99 Extended Abstracts, pages 180--181, 1999.


Enriched Links: A Framework For Improving Web Navigation Using.. - Geisler (2000)   (1 citation)  (Correct)

No context found.

Rekimoto, J. TimeScape: A Time Machine for the Desktop Environment. In Proceedings of CHI '99, Late-Breaking Results (Pittsburgh, PA, May 1999), ACM Press, 180-181.

Online articles have much greater impact   More about CiteSeer.IST   Add search form to your site   Submit documents   Feedback  

CiteSeer.IST - Copyright Penn State and NEC