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Moran, T.P., Melle v.W., Chiu, P., "Tailorable Domain Objects as Meeting Tools for an Electronic Whiteboard," CSCW 1998.

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ConnecTables: Dynamic Coupling of Displays for the .. - Tandler, Prante.. (2001)   (13 citations)  (Correct)

....single display groupware applications [2, 13, 22] have enriched the one computer setup by providing multiple input channels to it using different devices. But still, the collaborating users are not freed to move around. They share one single display that cannot be split. For example, Tivoli [11] offers a pen based user interface with elaborated features to organize various materials on an electronic whiteboard enabling at most three users to work in parallel using different pens. The users have to switch between modes to enter gestures or scribbles. Also, the meeting setup is restricted ....

Moran, T., van Melle, W. Tailorable Domain Objects as Meeting Tools for an Electronic Whiteboard. In ACM Press, pp. 295---304, 1998.


Demonstrational Customization of a Shared Whiteboard to Support .. - Li, Patrao   (Correct)

....on one event. The result may depend on the order of execution. Such problem will be aggravated in a large scale distributed session. While solutions to such problems have been well studied in database systems [36, 41] it is not clear yet if they are applicable in interactive applications. Tivoli [31] and Flatland [32, 19] are two whiteboards developed at Xerox PARC. Tivoli adopts a domain object model which allows customized manipulation of data imported from a database. A domain object is a group of related data objects representing a work entity. Tivoli has facilities for representing, ....

T. P. Moran, W. van Melle, and P. Chiu. Tailorable domain objects as meeting tools for an electronic whiteboard. In ACM CSCW'98 Proceedings,Nov. 1998.


Fluid Interaction with High-resolution Wall-size Displays - Guimbretire, Stone, Winograd (2001)   (14 citations)  (Correct)

....images, stroke sheets, and VNC sheets, and create a snapshot of it. This makes it easy to use VNC to browse or generate information of interest, and then stick results on the wall. 4. 3 Containers In a stroke oriented system for whiteboard like use, structures can be inferred from stroke geometry [13, 19, 20, 23, 24]. For a wall interaction metaphor with mixed materials, we use automatically interpreted structure at the lower level (e.g. inferring that a collection of strokes is a character string) but use explicit structuring with containers for higher level structures such as lists and graphs. A ....

Moran, T., Van Melle, B., and Chiu, P. Tailorable Domain Objects as Meeting Tools for an Electronic Whiteboard. In Proc. CSCW '98, pp. 295-304.


A Review of Groupware Evaluations - Pinelle, Gutwin (2000)   (3 citations)  (Correct)

....interface Patterns of system use User interaction while using the software 3. Results We include results from our analyses in each of the areas outlined above. 3.1. Characterizing the software Table 1: Characterizing the software # References Distribution in time Synchronous 26 70 [3, 5, 7, 8, 10, 11, 15, 17, 18, 19, 21, 22, 25, 28, 30, 31, 35, 37, 38, 42, 43, 44, 47, 48, 49, 50] Asynchronous 11 30 [1, 7, 10, 33, 38, 39, 41, 42, 44, 45, 51] Implementation type Academic Research 19 59 [8, 11, 15, 17, 18, 21, 22, 25, 28, 31, 33, 35, 37, 42, 43, 44, 48, 49, 50] Real world 13 41 [1, 3, 5, 7, 10, 19, 30, 38, 39, 41, 45, 47, 51] The majority of the papers ....

.... 11, 15, 17, 18, 19, 21, 22, 25, 28, 30, 31, 35, 37, 38, 42, 43, 44, 47, 48, 49, 50] Asynchronous 11 30 [1, 7, 10, 33, 38, 39, 41, 42, 44, 45, 51] Implementation type Academic Research 19 59 [8, 11, 15, 17, 18, 21, 22, 25, 28, 31, 33, 35, 37, 42, 43, 44, 48, 49, 50] Real world 13 41 [1, 3, 5, 7, 10, 19, 30, 38, 39, 41, 45, 47, 51]. The majority of the papers introduced synchronous applications. Most of the systems were academic or research implementation, and a smaller number of implementations were installed with in a real world setting. Results are summarized in Table 1 1 . 3.2. Evaluation type The two main types of ....

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Moran, T.P., van Melle, W. and Chiu, P. Tailorable Domain Objects as Meeting Tools for an Electronic Whiteboard. CSCW `98, 295-304.


Towards Seamless Support of Natural Collaborative.. - Scott, Shoemaker, Inkpen (2000)   (1 citation)  (Correct)

....technologies based on real world artifacts that facilitate collaborative interactions. This approach combines existing collaborative tools from the physical world (e.g. a whiteboard) with the benefits of traditional computer technology. Interactive displays, such as electronic whiteboards [9, 13] and tabletop displays [14] are two alternative technologies based on real world counterparts. Electronic whiteboards and tabletop displays are natural choices since they are based on a shared surface metaphor, such as a typical office whiteboard or a table surface. This allows researchers to ....

Moran, T.P., van Melle, W., & Chiu, P. (1998). Tailorable Domain Objects as Meeting Tools for an Electronic Whiteboard. Proceedings of CSCW `98, 295304.


Architecture of BEACH: The Software Infrastructure for Roomware.. - Tandler (2000)   (2 citations)  (Correct)

.... Requirement 8: Special Support for Common Tasks An interview study we carried out states that creative teams have several recurring tasks [20] As a consequence, the software should offer dedicated help for a selected set of such tasks, which should be extensible to meet future needs [7]. Important examples are creative sessions, presentations, meeting moderation, and project task management. ARCHITECTURE OF BEACH With respect to the requirements described in the previous section, BEACH has a layered architecture that is built on top of a core model (COAST BEACHcore in fig. ....

Moran, T., van Melle, W. (1998). Tailorable Domain Objects as Meeting Tools for an Electronic Whiteboard. In Proceedings of the ACM 1998 Conference on Computer Supported Cooperative Work (CSCW'98), ACM Press, pp. 295---304.


Flatland: New Dimensions in Office Whiteboards - Mynatt, Igarashi, Edwards..   (21 citations)  (Correct)

....a segment, the user drags it out of the search segment and onto the root segment. This retrieval interface is not fully implemented, but the underlying storage and retrieval mechanisms are in place. RELATED WORK Tivoli One of the major examples of previous work in this area is Tivoli [13] 14] 14][15], a pen based interface designed to run on a LiveBoard. Tivoli is principally designed for a specific task supporting focused meetings about a single issue. It has been most used and studied in the context of supporting PARC intellectual property management. Although there are many surface ....

Moran, T.P., van Melle, W., & Chiu, P. Tailorable domain objects as meeting tools for an electronic whiteboard. To be published in the Proceedings of CSCW'98. New York: ACM.


Spatial Interpretation of Domain Objects Integrated into.. - Moran, van Melle, Chiu (1998)   (2 citations)  Self-citation (Moran Van melle Chiu)   (Correct)

....to the workflow system. Thus, domain objects represent the subject matter (i.e. domain of knowledge) of meetings. We are able to tailor specialized domain objects as meeting tools that are tuned to particular contents and processes of meetings. We introduced domain objects in a companion paper [14], where we motivated their utility for building meeting tools, described several applications, and related our experience in using the tools. In this paper, we focus on the user interface issues. We first give a concrete example (Section 2) and the general rationale for domain objects (Section 3) ....

....that supports the way meetings actually work. 5. The Tivoli user interface can effectively blend structured and freeform materials on the board. 6. Tivoli can interpret the 2D spatial arrangement of the domain objects on the board and provide supporting computations. A companion paper [14] focuses on reasons 1 3. The main purpose of this paper is to substantiate reasons 4 6, i.e. the user interface issues. 4. OVERVIEW OF TIVOLI Tivoli is a complex program written in C , running under X Windows in Unix. It started as a basic whiteboard simulation application [15] but it has ....

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Moran, T. P., van Melle, W., & Chiu, P. (1998). Tailorable domain objects as meeting tools for an electronic whiteboard. Proceedings of CSCW'98.


Mitsubishi Electric Research Laboratories - Http Www Merl (2005)   (Correct)

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Moran, T.P., Melle v.W., Chiu, P., "Tailorable Domain Objects as Meeting Tools for an Electronic Whiteboard," CSCW 1998.


MultiSpace: Enabling Electronic Document.. - Multi-Device.. (2005)   (Correct)

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Moran, T.P., Melle v.W., Chiu, P., "Tailorable Domain Objects as Meeting Tools for an Electronic Whiteboard," CSCW 1998.


Challenges for Ubicomp Evaluation - Carter, Mankoff (2004)   (Correct)

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T. P. Moran, W. van Melle, and P. Chiu. Tailorable domain objects as meeting tools for an electronic whiteboard. In Proceedings of ACM CSCW'98 Conference on Computer-Supported Cooperative Work, From Single-Display Groupware to Mobility, pp. 295--304, 1998.


Diffusing Information in Organizational Settings: Learning.. - Snowdon, Grasso (2002)   (2 citations)  (Correct)

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Moran, T.P., van Melle, W., Chiu, P. Tailorable Domain Objects as Meeting Tools for an Electronic Whiteboard. Proceedings of CSCW'98 (Seattle USA, November 1998), 295-304


Computer-Supported Cooperative Work - Kevin Mills National   (Correct)

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Moran, T., et al. Tailorable Domain Objects as Meeting Tools for an Electronic Whiteboard. Proceedings of the ACM 1998 Conference on Computer Supported Cooperative Work, ACM Press, 1998.

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