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ABSTRACT
Service-based wireless devices like wireless telephones require users to interact with aspects of the technology beyond the hardware and software of the handset. By entering into contractual relationships with service-providers, and by using network-based services, users interact with a larger system---one that has social and technological components. The operation of the wireless telephone requires the assimilation of heterogeneous sources of information from the device manufacturer, sales people, customer service representatives, marketing people, and members of the popular media, among others, which can easily confound users' understanding of this new class of technology. Opportunities for usability problems therefore scale beyond the handset, as do opportunities for better design. We report the results of a study of 19 novice wireless phone users who were closely tracked for the first 6 weeks after service acquisition. Taking a technology-as-system analytical approach, we describe the wireless telephony system as four socio-technical components: hardware, software, "netware," and "bizware." This particular organization of the system is intended for the practical application of designing for usability.
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 13
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Michael Kieslinger , Laura Polazzi, Supporting time-based coordination in everyday service interactions: the fluidtime system, Proceedings of the 2004 conference on Designing interactive systems: processes, practices, methods, and techniques, August 01-04, 2004, Cambridge, MA, USA
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Rebecca E. Grinter , W. Keith Edwards , Marshini Chetty , Erika S. Poole , Ja-Young Sung , Jeonghwa Yang , Andy Crabtree , Peter Tolmie , Tom Rodden , Chris Greenhalgh , Steve Benford, The ins and outs of home networking: The case for useful and usable domestic networking, ACM Transactions on Computer-Human Interaction (TOCHI), v.16 n.2, p.1-28, June 2009
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INDEX TERMS
Primary 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:
Evaluation/methodology
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:
User-centered design;
Theory and methods
K.
Computing Milieux
K.4
COMPUTERS AND SOCIETY
K.4.3
Organizational Impacts
General Terms:
Design,
Human Factors,
Theory
Keywords:
cell,
field study,
mobile,
qualitative study,
social construction of technology,
socio-technical systems,
usability,
wireless telephones
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