Email overload: exploring personal information management of email
Proceedings of the SIGCHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems
Understanding and Using Context
Personal and Ubiquitous Computing
Has the Internet become indispensable?
Communications of the ACM - Has the Internet become indispensable?
The two cultures: mashing up web 2.0 and the semantic web
Proceedings of the 16th international conference on World Wide Web
Foundations and Trends in Web Science
SearchBar: a search-centric web history for task resumption and information re-finding
Proceedings of the SIGCHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems
Communications of the ACM - Inspiring Women in Computing
Personalization for the semantic web
Proceedings of the First international conference on Reasoning Web
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Key architectural elements of the web, namely, HTTP, URL and HTML enable a very simple user model of the web based on hyperlinks. While this model allows browser-based access to a wide array of online content and resources, the limitations in user experience provided in this interaction model are increasingly apparent. Two decades after the birth of the web, new technologies such as Rich Internet Application, AJAX, and Web 2.0 seek to improve web user interfaces, but in general their main benefit is to individual server sites. Little advancement has been made to advance the user model of the web at a macro level where the interaction is driven not by the server but by the user. This paper reviews the problems of the current internet in order to motivate the discussion of the smart internet that will occur in later chapters of this book.