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Popcorn: the personal knowledge base
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Source Designing Interactive Systems archive
Proceedings of the 6th conference on Designing Interactive systems table of contents
University Park, PA, USA
SESSION: Social interaction table of contents
Pages: 150 - 159  
Year of Publication: 2006
ISBN:1-59593-367-0
Authors
Stephen Davies  University of Colorado, Boulder, CO
Scotty Allen  University of Colorado, Boulder, CO
Jon Raphaelson  University of Colorado, Boulder, CO
Emil Meng  University of Colorado, Boulder, CO
Jake Engleman  University of Colorado, Boulder, CO
Roger King  University of Colorado, Boulder, CO
Clayton Lewis  University of Colorado, Boulder, CO
Sponsors
ACM: Association for Computing Machinery
SIGCHI: ACM Special Interest Group on Computer-Human Interaction
Publisher
ACM  New York, NY, USA
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ABSTRACT

People often use powerful tools to manage the documents they encounter, but very rarely to store the mental knowledge they glean from those documents. Popcorn is a personal knowledge base: an experimental interface and database designed to store and retrieve a user's accumulated personal knowledge. It aims to let the user represent information in a way that corresponds more naturally to their mental conceptions than simply text would, in part by making heavy use of transclusion: sharing items among multiple contexts. This paper describes the design rationale for the system, contrasting it with related efforts, and presents the results of deploying it to a group of volunteers who used it in real-world settings. The results, while revealing some limitations in the tool, and some challenges in coping with knowledge reorganization, suggest that the analysis underlying the design is useful, and that Popcorn is a powerful and effective tool for a variety of intellectual work.


REFERENCES

Note: OCR errors may be found in this Reference List extracted from the full text article. ACM has opted to expose the complete List rather than only correct and linked references.

 
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Collaborative Colleagues:
Stephen Davies: colleagues
Scotty Allen: colleagues
Jon Raphaelson: colleagues
Emil Meng: colleagues
Jake Engleman: colleagues
Roger King: colleagues
Clayton Lewis: colleagues