| KLEMMER,S.R., THOMSEN, M., PHELPS-GOODMAN, E., LEE, R., AND LANDAY,J.A. 2002. Where do web sites come from?: Capturing and interacting with design theory. In Proceedings of the Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems. Minneapolis, MN. 1--8. |
....Side Views allow users to clarify the effect of commands, make comparisons between commands, experiment, and serendipitously discover viable alternatives. BACKGROUND Practitioners naturally experiment and explore multiple solutions to a problem in the course of constructing a creative result [4, 5, 6]. For example, industrial designers explicitly generate dozens of concept sketches for a new product, then extract the most desirable characteristics of each to combine into a new series of sketches. This process repeats itself until only a handful of candidates remain. The need for this ....
Klemmer, S.R., M. Thomsen, E. Phelps-Goodman, R. Lee, J.A. Landay, Where Do Web Sites Come From? Capturing and Interacting with Design History. CHI Letters, Human Factors in Computing Systems: CHI2002. 4(1).
.... supporting variations is to provide tools that enable a user to easily traverse histories and to reload multiple versions at the same time (something not possible in the Single State Document Model) Recent work on an enhanced history system for website design moves us closer to this possibility [7]. User Interfaces and Evaluations In Support of Evaluations User interfaces support evaluations through multiple perspectives and views, such as different levels of zoom, and through alternative representations, such as separate color channels. These evaluations can happen alone, or in ....
Klemmer, S.R., M. Thomsen, E. Phelps-Goodman, R. Lee, J.A. Landay, Where Do Web Sites Come From? Capturing and Interacting with Design History. CHI Letters, Human Factors in Computing Systems: CHI2002. 4(1).
....in the other space, and vice versa. Our distributed system is designed for two groups, with multiple users at each end. Our tangible approach is the first system to enable simultaneous, multi input across locations. We have implemented this system as an extension to the Designers Outpost [5]. Keywords CSCW, tangible, remote collaboration, shared workspace INTRODUCTION In our previous studies into web design, we found that pens, paper, walls, and tables were often used for explaining, developing, and communicating ideas during the early phases of design. The Designers Outpost ....
....that the system is aware of their presence. Normally, shadows are very faint. However, when an object s physical state becomes transactionally inconsistent, we cast a strong red shadow indicating to the user to remove the artifact. We introduced this feedback notion in our design history system [5], and have found anecdotally that it seems successful for remote collaboration as well. Transient Deictic Ink When users would like to draw their collaborators attention to a particular spatial position or artifact, they need some way to convey this deictic gesture. We found that a simple ....
Klemmer, S.R., M. Thomsen, E. Phelps-Goodman, R. Lee, and J.A. Landay, Where Do Web Sites Come From? Capturing and Interacting with Design History. CHI 2002, Human Factors in Computing Systems, CHI Letters, 2002.
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KLEMMER,S.R., THOMSEN, M., PHELPS-GOODMAN, E., LEE, R., AND LANDAY,J.A. 2002. Where do web sites come from?: Capturing and interacting with design theory. In Proceedings of the Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems. Minneapolis, MN. 1--8.
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Klemmer, S. R., Thomsen, M., Phelps-Goodman, E. P., Lee, R., Landay, J. A. Where Do Web Sites Come From? Capturing and Interacting with Design History. In Proceedings of CHI 2002, pp. 1-8.
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Klemmer, S.; M. Thomsen, E. Phelps-Goodman, R. Lee, J. A. Landay, Where Do Web Sites Come From? Capturing and Interacting with Design History, in: Proc. CHI'02, ACM, pp. 1-- 8, 2002.
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Klemmer, R.S., Thomsen, M., Phelps-Goodman, E., Lee, R. & Landay, J.A. (2002) Where do web sites come from? Capturing and interacting with design history. Proc. CHI 2002, ACM Press, 1-8.
No context found.
Klemmer, R.S., Thomsen, M., Phelps-Goodman, E., Lee, R. and Landay, J.A. Where do web sites come from? Capturing and interacting with design history. Proc. CHI 2002, CHI Letters 4(1), 1-8.
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