Publication
The Adoption and Use of ‘BABBLE’: A Field Study of Chat in the Workplace
AbstractOne way to gain a principled understanding of computer-mediated communication (CMC) use in the wild is to consider the properties of the communication medium, the usage practices, and the social context in which practices are situated. We describe the adoption and use of a novel, chat-like system called BABBLE. Drawing on interviews and conversation logs from a 6-month field study of six different groups at IBM Corporation (USA), we examine the ways in which the technical properties of the system enable particular types of communicative practices such as waylaying and unobtrusive broadcast. We then consider how these practices influence (positively or negatively) the adoption trajectories of the six deployments.LINK
Related Resources
See what’s new.
2002
Boom Chameleon: Simultaneous capture of 3D viewpoint, voice and gesture annotations on a spatially-aware displayWe introduce the Boom Chameleon, a novel input/output device…
2018
ElectroTutor: Test-Driven Physical Computing TutorialsA wide variety of tools for creating physical computing systems have…
2011
On the Velocity of an Implicit SurfaceIn this paper we derive an equation for the velocity of an arbitrary…
2023
Why is applying Artificial Intelligence in Construction so difficult?While applying AI in construction can be challenging, Kasia Borowska…
Get in touch
Something pique your interest? Get in touch if you’d like to learn more about Autodesk Research, our projects, people, and potential collaboration opportunities.
Contact us