Reflections on NoteCards: seven issues for the next generation of hypermedia systems
Communications of the ACM
An apprentice that discovers hypertext links
Hypertext: concepts, systems and applications
VIKI: spatial hypertext supporting emergent structure
ECHT '94 Proceedings of the 1994 ACM European conference on Hypermedia technology
Hunter gatherer: interaction support for the creation and management of within-web-page collections
Proceedings of the 11th international conference on World Wide Web
Leonardo's Laptop: Human Needs and the New Computing Technologies
Leonardo's Laptop: Human Needs and the New Computing Technologies
Breaking the book: translating the chemistry lab book into a pervasive computing lab environment
Proceedings of the SIGCHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems
Earlier Web usage statistics as predictors of later citation impact: Research Articles
Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology
IEEE Intelligent Systems
Software or wetware?: discovering when and why people use digital prosthetic memory
Proceedings of the SIGCHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems
Gui --- phooey!: the case for text input
Proceedings of the 20th annual ACM symposium on User interface software and technology
Annual Review of Information Science and Technology
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This paper postulates that for the Semantic Web to grow and gain input from fields that will surely benefit it, it needs to develop an analogue that will help people not only understand what it is, but what the potential opportunities are that are enabled by these new protocols. The model proposed in the paper takes the way that Web interaction has been framed as a baseline to inform a similar analogue for the Semantic Web. While the Web has been represented as a Page + Links, the paper presents the argument that the Semantic Web can be conceptualized as a Notebook + Memex. The argument considers how this model also presents new challenges for fundamental human interaction with computing, and that hypertext models have much to contribute to this new understanding for distributed information systems.