How
Knowledge Workers Gather Information from the Web : Implications for
Peer-to-Peer File Sharing Tools
Hyams, Jennifer; Sellen, Abigail
To appear in the Proceedings
of the British HCI Conference, Bath, UK, Sept. 2003.
Keyword(s): peer-to-peer; knowledge workers;
information lifecycle; information sharing; web use; information
gathering
Abstract:
The success of peer-to-peer (p2p) music-sharing has no
doubt contributed to assumptions that individuals' PCs are a vast
untapped resource of assets just waiting to be unlocked. This includes
the push for opening up our file spaces at work to allow peers access
to previously inaccessible information. We explore the potential
of these ideas and test some of the assumptions underlying them
by looking at 16 knowledge workers' file spaces in the context of
Web information-gathering tasks. Knowledge workers' file spaces
are more like "workbenches" than "archives"
and the information held within them is fundamentally different
to that which is placed in shared information spaces. Work is carried
out on information to make it shareable, yet this information is
found side-by-side on the "workbench" with unshareable
information. This leads us to question the potential value of enabling
people to open up their file spaces without considering the reusability
of this information for others.
16 Pages
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