1997
DOI: 10.1080/014492997119888
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Empirical assessment of individuals' 'personal information management systems'

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Cited by 26 publications
(17 citation statements)
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“…The total usage of electronic tools reported here is higher than that found by Jones and Thomas [13], who present the results of a pilot study of ''personal information management tools'' that concludes that few (less than 20% of the 23 subject in their informal survey) make use of any electronic information management aids, but that most people (more than 50%) use two or more aids of some sort, of which the to-do list is the most common. This difference can be accounted for by the small size of both samples, the relative technological sophistication of the users in the current study, and the free availability of Meeting Maker to all users in this study.…”
Section: Discussioncontrasting
confidence: 54%
“…The total usage of electronic tools reported here is higher than that found by Jones and Thomas [13], who present the results of a pilot study of ''personal information management tools'' that concludes that few (less than 20% of the 23 subject in their informal survey) make use of any electronic information management aids, but that most people (more than 50%) use two or more aids of some sort, of which the to-do list is the most common. This difference can be accounted for by the small size of both samples, the relative technological sophistication of the users in the current study, and the free availability of Meeting Maker to all users in this study.…”
Section: Discussioncontrasting
confidence: 54%
“…A surprisingly limited use of readily accessible computerbased organisational tools, such as web-favourites (bookmarks), email folders and music / image management software was also highlighted, although this has also been observed in other PIM studies [Hightower et al, 1998;Jones and Thomas, 1997]. Even when these tools are used, our results show that they are seldom used to their full potential.…”
Section: Overcoming Memory Lapsescontrasting
confidence: 39%
“…Other scholars have also made similar observations. For example, Jones and Thomas [1997] surveyed people's use of new personal information management technologies and found low adoption rates, the findings of Tauscher and Greenberg [1997] indicate that less than 1% of webbrowser actions are on the history list, and Hightower et al [1998] suggest that the value is less than 0.1%. The preference for user creativity over explicitly design tools has explained by the fact that bookmarks and web-history lack the ability to 1) Remind the users that they have this information 2) Access from multiple locations 3) Supply some context that will remind the user why they decided to keep the information [Bruce et al, 2004b].…”
Section: Categorisation and Memorymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Recent work has started addressing the organization of email and web-browsing activity [24,33,34]. Many of these works have been motivated by works in psychology and human factors on how people organize personal information --both paper and electronic [23,25,5,10,12,21,22].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%