2000
DOI: 10.1145/355324.355326
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Satchel

Abstract: Current solutions for providing access to electronic documents while away from the office do not meet the special needs of mobile document workers. We describe ”Satchel,“ a system that is designed specifically to support the distinctive features of mobile document work. Satchel is designed to meet the following five high-level design goals (1) easy access to document services; (2) timely document access; (3) streamlined user interface; (4) ubiquity; and (5)compliance with security policies. Our current prototy… Show more

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Cited by 50 publications
(24 citation statements)
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“…In his study of identity issues in a Northern Irish town, William Kelleher [26] describes the ways in which sectarian identity is enmeshed into the spatial organization of the city. Residents describe the historical patterns of settlement and migration by which the contemporary urban social landscape was formed.…”
Section: Finding More Than Your Waymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In his study of identity issues in a Northern Irish town, William Kelleher [26] describes the ways in which sectarian identity is enmeshed into the spatial organization of the city. Residents describe the historical patterns of settlement and migration by which the contemporary urban social landscape was formed.…”
Section: Finding More Than Your Waymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Especially within the last decade, a continuous trend towards higher local mobility could be observed in most companies. Even if employees are within the office building, they spend considerable time away from their own desk, working in meeting rooms, other offices or in the hallway (Lamming et al 2000;Huang et al 2004). According to some estimates, white-collar workers spend between 25% and 70% of their daily working time in conferences or meetings with colleagues (Panko 1992;Eldridge et al 1994;Whittaker et al 1994).…”
Section: Mobility: Local Vs Globalmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Mobile technology including laptop computers, personal digital assistants, mobile phones, and other personal communication technologies, are effective means for storing and communicating both explicit records and implicit knowledge. Mobile technology permits timely access, a well understood interface, ubiquity, and compliance with organisational security policies (Lamming et al, 2000). Transnational organisations will naturally find that, that due to their constant need to travel amongst their multiple sites, mobile workers will find that mobile ICT will provide an important source of organisational memory storage and development.…”
Section: Organisational Memorymentioning
confidence: 99%