PaperLink: a technique for hyperlinking from real paper to electronic content
Proceedings of the ACM SIGCHI Conference on Human factors in computing systems
Real-world interaction using the FieldMouse
Proceedings of the 12th annual ACM symposium on User interface software and technology
WebStickers: using physical tokens to access, manage and share bookmarks to the Web
DARE '00 Proceedings of DARE 2000 on Designing augmented reality environments
The character, value, and management of personal paper archives
ACM Transactions on Computer-Human Interaction (TOCHI)
EP '98/RIDT '98 Proceedings of the 7th International Conference on Electronic Publishing, Held Jointly with the 4th International Conference on Raster Imaging and Digital Typography: Electronic Publishing, Artistic Imaging, and Digital Typography
An Extended Entity-Relationship Approach to Data Management in Object-Oriented Systems
ER '93 Proceedings of the 12th International Conference on the Entity-Relationship Approach: Entity-Relationship Approach
A Model for Classification Structures with Evolution Control
ER '96 Proceedings of the 15th International Conference on Conceptual Modeling
The Myth of the Paperless Office
The Myth of the Paperless Office
Information Concepts for Content Management
WISEW '02 Proceedings of the Third International Conference on Web Information Systems Engineering (Workshops) - (WISEw'02)
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While there have been dramatic increases in the use of digital technologies for the storage and processing of information, the affordances of paper have ensured its retention as a key information medium. Recent developments in digitally augmented paper provide the potential to embed active links within printed documents, thereby turning paper into an interactive medium. In this paper, we address the issues of information granularity and semantics that arise in integrating paper as a first-class interactive information medium in hypermedia systems and show that the information server is vital in realising the true potential of this vision. Further, we discuss the authoring issues of cross-media information environments and the forms of tools required to support the various categories of authoring activity.