Online help systems: a conspectus
Communications of the ACM
Design rules based on analyses of human error
Communications of the ACM
Design principles for human-computer interfaces
CHI '83 Proceedings of the SIGCHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems
Human factors testing in the design of Xerox's 8010 “Star” office workstation
CHI '83 Proceedings of the SIGCHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems
The command interpreter and command language design of the com-share COMMANDER II system
ACM '76 Proceedings of the 1976 annual conference
Designing an interactive facility for non-programmers
ACM '80 Proceedings of the ACM 1980 annual conference
Software psychology: Human factors in computer and information systems (Winthrop computer systems series)
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A recent development in human-machine interfaces is the partitioning of a computer terminal screen into distinct "windows" of information. This paper defines the concept of "windows" and describes its most common features and applicable operations. It then investigates the utility and application of windowing and compares its features with those of existing user interfaces. The emphasis is on improving the human-machine interface.