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ABSTRACT
One of the crucial properties of documents through the ages has been their fixity. The ability to mark surfaces in relatively stable ways has made it possible for people distributed across space and time to see the same images and thereby to have access to the same meanings or communicative intent. Today, however, with the increasing use of digital technologies, it is often asserted that we are moving from the fixed world of paper documents to the fluid world of digital documents. In this paper I challenge this assertion, arguing instead that all documents, regardless of medium, are fixed and fluid. Thus, although paper documents do fix aspects of communication, they do (and must) also change; and although digital documents are easily changeable, they must also be capable of remaining fixed. I make use of this analysis in two ways: first, to examine the fixity and fluidity of hypertext; and second, to critique Bolter's argument in Writing Space concerning the movement from “fixed to fluid.”
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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CITED BY 11
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Luis Francisco-Revilla , Frank M. Shipman, III , Richard Furuta , Unmil Karadkar , Avital Arora, Perception of content, structure, and presentation changes in Web-based hypertext, Proceedings of the twelfth ACM conference on Hypertext and Hypermedia, August 14-18, 2001, Århus, none, Denmark
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Luis Francisco-Revilla , Frank Shipman , Richard Furuta , Unmil Karadkar , Avital Arora, Managing change on the web, Proceedings of the 1st ACM/IEEE-CS joint conference on Digital libraries, p.67-76, January 2001, Roanoke, Virginia, United States
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INDEX TERMS
Primary Classification:
H.
Information Systems
H.5
INFORMATION INTERFACES AND PRESENTATION (I.7)
H.5.1
Multimedia Information Systems
Subjects:
Hypertext navigation and maps**
Additional Classification:
H.
Information Systems
H.5
INFORMATION INTERFACES AND PRESENTATION (I.7)
H.5.2
User Interfaces (D.2.2, H.1.2, I.3.6)
Subjects:
Interaction styles (e.g., commands, menus, forms, direct manipulation)
I.
Computing Methodologies
I.7
DOCUMENT AND TEXT PROCESSING
I.7.2
Document Preparation
Subjects:
Hypertext/hypermedia
General Terms:
Design,
Human Factors,
Performance
Keywords:
documents,
fixity,
fluidity,
hypertext
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