| Improving problem-oriented mailing list archives with MCS |
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International Conference on Software Engineering
archive
Proceedings of the 22nd international conference on Software engineering
table of contents
Limerick, Ireland
Pages: 95 - 104
Year of Publication: 2000
ISBN:1-58113-206-9
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Author
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Robert S. Brewer
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Collaborative Software Development Laboratory, Department of Information & Computer Sciences, University of Hawaii, Manoa, Honolulu, Hawaii
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Downloads (6 Weeks): 8, Downloads (12 Months): 33, Citation Count: 1
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ABSTRACT
Developers often use electronic mailing lists when seeking assistance with a particular software application. The archives of these mailing lists provide a rich repository of problem-solving knowledge. Developers seeking a quick answer to a problem find these archives inconvenient, because they lack efficient searching mechanisms, and retain the structure of the original conversational threads which are rarely relevant to the knowledge seeker.We present a system called MCS which improves mailing list archives through a process called condensation. Condensation involves several tasks: extracting only messages of longer-term relevance, adding metadata to those messages to improve searching, and potentially editing the content of the messages when appropriate to clarify. The condensation process is performed by a human editor (assisted by a tool), rather than by an artificial intelligence (AI) system.We describe the design and implementation of MCS, and compare it to rlated systems. We also present our experiences condensing a 1428 message mailing list archive to an archive containing only 177 messages (an 88% reduction). The condensation required only 1.5 minutes of editor effort per message. The condensed archive was adopted by the users of the mailing list.
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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[doi> 10.1145/234828.234834]
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