DocumentCode :
2195651
Title :
Sociable information spaces
Author :
Donath, Judith S.
Author_Institution :
Media Lab., MIT, Cambridge, MA, USA
fYear :
1995
fDate :
20-22 Jun 1995
Firstpage :
269
Lastpage :
273
Abstract :
Any computer on the Internet potentially connects you to millions of other people. The promise is that great communities will form, communities based not on accidents of location, but on common interests and concerns. This is, to a certain extent occurring. Usenet newsgroups and similar forums host thousands of discussions on a wide variety of topics. Conceptually, combining online forums and published materials is quite interesting. It brings the experience of sitting in a room with several people, reading the paper, and exclaiming over a particularly unusual event or arguing over a relevant point of politics to a global scale. It lets the reader see what ideas have drawn the most commentary and it transforms the wholly passive reader into a potentially active writer. It is especially interesting in the context of the Web, for here the boundaries between content and comment begin to break down
Keywords :
Internet; electronic publishing; information networks; social aspects of automation; Internet; World Wide Web; online forums; published materials; sociable information spaces; Books; Context; Laboratories; Machinery; Motion pictures; Multiuser detection; Publishing; Space technology; TV; Writing;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Community Networking, 1995. Integrated Multimedia Services to the Home., Proceedings of the Second International Workshop on
Conference_Location :
Princeton, NJ
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-2756-X
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/CN.1995.509582
Filename :
509582
Link To Document :
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