Socially translucent systems: social proxies, persistent conversation, and the design of “babble”
Proceedings of the SIGCHI conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems
Charting past, present, and future research in ubiquitous computing
ACM Transactions on Computer-Human Interaction (TOCHI) - Special issue on human-computer interaction in the new millennium, Part 1
The affordances of media spaces for collaboration
CSCW '92 Proceedings of the 1992 ACM conference on Computer-supported cooperative work
The Mutual Knowledge Problem and Its Consequences for Dispersed Collaboration
Organization Science
Recovery Oriented Computing: A New Research Agenda for a New Century
HPCA '02 Proceedings of the 8th International Symposium on High-Performance Computer Architecture
Out of context: computer systems that adapt to, and learn from, context
IBM Systems Journal
Building disappearing computers
Communications of the ACM - The disappearing computer
Communications of the ACM - The disappearing computer
Collaboration and learning in immersive virtual environments
CSCL '99 Proceedings of the 1999 conference on Computer support for collaborative learning
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Collaborative capabilities are a hallmark of a new generation of networked applications. While traditional collaboration puts the computer in the foreground to help users interface through personal computing portholes, ambient collaboration reverses this paradigm by placing the machine in the background and enabling users to synergistically share a workspace with focus on mutual presence and tasks rather than tools. Although various ambient collaborative systems have been deployed in recent years, the field itself lacks a conceptual framework, in particular in contrast with legacy collaborative technologies. We introduce a simple systematics and roadmap for ambient collaboration to identify opportunities and challenges unique to this class of computing.