This paper describes a series of tests of the generality of a `radically tailorable' tool for cooperative work. Users of this system can create applications by combining and modifying four kinds of building blocks: objects, views, agents, and links. We found that user-level tailoring of these primitives can provide most of the functionality found in well-known cooperative work systems such as gIBIS, Coordinator, Lotus Notes, and Information Lens. These primitives, therefore, appear to provide an elementary `tailoring language' out of which a wide variety of integrated information management and collaboration applications can be constructed by end users.
CITATION STYLE
Malone, T. W., Lai, K. Y., & Fry, C. (1992). Experiments with Oval: A radically tailorable tool for cooperative work. In Proceedings of the Conference on Computer-Supported Cooperative Work (pp. 289–297). Publ by ACM.
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