Supporting social worlds with the community bar
Author(s) -
Gregor McEwan,
Saul Greenberg
Publication year - 2005
Publication title -
citeseer x (the pennsylvania state university)
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
ISBN - 1-59593-223-2
DOI - 10.1145/1099203.1099207
Subject(s) - casual , focus (optics) , bar (unit) , sociology , focus group , computer science , social relation , public relations , social science , political science , geography , physics , optics , meteorology , anthropology , law
The Community Bar is groupware supporting informal awareness and casual interaction for small social worlds: a group of people with a common purpose. Its conceptual design is primarily based on a comprehensive sociological theory called the Locales Framework, with extra details supplied by the Focus/Nimbus model of awareness. Design nuances are strongly influenced by observations and feedback supplied by a community who had been using both the Community Bar and its Notification Collage predecessor for a total of five years. As a consequence, Community Bar's design supports how communities of ad-hoc and long-standing groups are built and sustained within multiple locales: places that offer a group the site and means for maintaining awareness of one another and for rapidly moving into interaction. This includes a person's lightweight management of his or her membership in multiple locales, as well as ones varying engagement with the people and artefacts within them.
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