Proceedings of the 11th Annual ACM Symposium on User Interface Software and Technology 1998
DOI: 10.1145/288392.288596
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Data mountain

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Cited by 338 publications
(19 citation statements)
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“…More recent work includes Benyon & Höök (1997), Chen and Czerwinski (1997), Chen and Rada (1996), Curl, Olfman, and Satzinger (1998), Dillon and Watson (1996), Höök, Dahlbäck, and Sjölinder (1996), Robertson, Czerwinski, Larson, Robbins, Thiel, and van Dantzich (1998), and Stanney and Salvendy (1995). The new generation of studies in individual differences introduce new design features and even new metaphors and paradigms of interaction.…”
Section: Individual Differencesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…More recent work includes Benyon & Höök (1997), Chen and Czerwinski (1997), Chen and Rada (1996), Curl, Olfman, and Satzinger (1998), Dillon and Watson (1996), Höök, Dahlbäck, and Sjölinder (1996), Robertson, Czerwinski, Larson, Robbins, Thiel, and van Dantzich (1998), and Stanney and Salvendy (1995). The new generation of studies in individual differences introduce new design features and even new metaphors and paradigms of interaction.…”
Section: Individual Differencesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Second, humans have strong abilities to remember a very large number of locations in space, both based on landmarks and absolute locations. Studies have shown that people can remember many locations (e.g., users were able to remember more than 100 locations with the Data Mountain system [43]). This means that if content in an FCD remains stable, people can use spatial memory as a retrieval mechanism.…”
Section: Human Characteristicsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The Piles system [Mander et al, 1992] promoted the "casual organization" of objects, similar to the piling strategies observed in physical office environments (see section 3.2). The Data Mountain system [Robertson et al, 1998] attempted to support three dimensional spatial capabilities in the management of Web bookmarks. The Data Mountain interface allows users to place thumbnail images representing web pages at arbitrary positions on an inclined plane.…”
Section: Tools For Re-findingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This approach has been applied to study the re-finding of personal photographs Harada et al, 2004], email messages [Ringel et al, 2003], and web-bookmarks [Robertson et al, 1998]. The usefulness of this approach depends on how easy it is to transfer the collection or gain remote access.…”
Section: Related Workmentioning
confidence: 99%