Supporting social worlds with the community bar

The Community Bar is groupware supporting informal awareness and casual interaction for small social worlds: a group of people with a common purpose. Its conceptual design is primarily based on a comprehensive sociological theory called the Locales Framework, with extra details supplied by the Focus/Nimbus model of awareness. Design nuances are strongly influenced by observations and feedback supplied by a community who had been using both the Community Bar and its Notification Collage predecessor for a total of five years. As a consequence, Community Bar's design supports how communities of ad-hoc and long-standing groups are built and sustained within multiple locales: places that offer a group the site and means for maintaining awareness of one another and for rapidly moving into interaction. This includes a person's lightweight management of his or her membership in multiple locales, as well as ones varying engagement with the people and artefacts within them.

[1]  Sara A. Bly,et al.  Media spaces: bringing people together in a video, audio, and computing environment , 1993, CACM.

[2]  Carl Gutwin,et al.  Adapting the Locales Framework for Heuristic Evaluation of Groupware , 2000, Australas. J. Inf. Syst..

[3]  Geraldine Fitzpatrick,et al.  Evolving Orbit: a process report on building locales , 1997, GROUP.

[4]  Steve Benford,et al.  Awareness driven video quality of service in collaborative virtual environments , 1998, CHI.

[5]  Tom Rodden,et al.  Populating the application: a model of awareness for cooperative applications , 1996, CSCW '96.

[6]  Owen Daly-Jones,et al.  Informal workplace communication: what is it like and how might we support it? , 1994, CHI '94.

[7]  Wendy A. Kellogg,et al.  The adoption and use of BABBLE: A field study of chat in the workplace , 1999, ECSCW.

[8]  Pavel Curtis,et al.  MUDs grow up: social virtual reality in the real world , 1994, Proceedings of COMPCON '94.

[9]  Geraldine Fitzpatrick The Locales Framework - Understanding and Designing for Wicked Problems , 2003, The Kluwer international series on computer supported cooperative work.

[10]  Bonnie A. Nardi,et al.  Interaction and outeraction: instant messaging in action , 2000, CSCW '00.

[11]  Geraldine Fitzpatrick,et al.  Tickertape: awareness in a single line , 1998, CHI Conference Summary.

[12]  Robert E. Kraut,et al.  Intellectual Teamwork: Social and Technological Foundations of Cooperative Work , 1990 .

[13]  Saul Greenberg,et al.  The notification collage: posting information to public and personal displays , 2001, CHI.

[14]  Saul Greenberg,et al.  Using a Room Metaphor to Ease Transitions in Groupware , 1998 .

[15]  Edward Tse Date ii , 2003 .

[16]  Robert E. Kraut,et al.  Patterns of contact and communication in scientific research collaboration , 1990, CSCW '88.

[17]  Anoop Gupta,et al.  Designing and deploying an information awareness interface , 2002, CSCW '02.