Workshop on WWW and Collaboration
September 11-12, 1995
Cambridge, MA
Organized by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Laboratory for Computer Science
and
Artificial Intelligence Laboratory
in cooperation with the
World Wide Web Consortium
The goal of this workshop was to establish a context for the
W3C as it proceeds to recommend protocol
changes that will address collaboration requirements. The focus was to be on extensions to the Web protocols that support wide-area
asynchronous collaborative applications, particularly extensions that
can have impact by early '96. The workshop was also intended to be a
starting point for continuing work on developing technology to
facilitate collaboration over the World Wide Web.
Monday Sept 11, 1995
Collaboration, Groupware and WWW
Irene Greif, Lotus Development Corporation
Collaboration on the World Wide Web
Tim Berners-Lee, MIT Laboratory for Computer Science and World Wide Web Consortium
Real-time Systems
WebTalk: Hosting live conferences on the Web
Judith Donath, MIT Media Lab
Niel Robertson, MIT Media Lab
Ubique's Virtual Places: Communication and interaction on the World Wide Web
Kirk Scott, Ubique, Inc.
Groupware Systems
Workgroup Web Forum: Tools and applications for WWW-based group collaboration
Dah Ming Chiu, Digital Equipment Corporation
David Griffin, Digital Equipment Corporation
InterNotes and Collaborative Filtering
Dave Newbold, Iris Associates, Inc.
Shared Information Spaces
Shared Information Space - An Interactive, Collaborative System Enablement Perspective
Sankar Virdhagriswaran, Crystaliz Inc.
Mike Webb, Crystaliz Inc.
Jeff Mallatt, Crystaliz Inc.
Collaboration with HyperNews
Daniel LaLiberte, NCSA
Supporting collaborative information sharing with the World-Wide Web:
The BSCW Shared Workspace system
Richard Bentley, GMD FIT.CSCW
Thilo Horstmann, GMD FIT.CSCW
Group Knowledge
The Open Meeting: Light-Weight Semantics for Wide-Area Collaboration
John C. Mallery, MIT Artificial Intelligence Laboratory
Roger Hurwitz, MIT Artificial Intelligence Laboratory
Collaborating around Shared Content on the WWW
Tom Gruber, Stanford University
Annotations
Public Annotations
Wayne Gramlich, Sun Microsystems
Generalized Annotations for Shared Commenting, Content Rating, and Other Collaborative Usages
Martin Roscheisen, Stanford University Computer Science Department
Terry Winograd, Stanford University Computer Science Department
Poster and Demonstration Session, MIT Lab for Computer Science
Tuesday September 12, 1995
Panel for "Brainstorming" Session
Chaired by Irene Greif, Lotus Development Corporation
Small group discussion
Task force sessions
Call to Action
Tim Berners-Lee, MIT Laboratory for Computer Science and World Wide Web Consortium
Working Group sign-ups and commitments for follow-up activities.
Karen MacArthur, Workshop Coordinator: [email protected]
Webmaster
Last updated 20 November 1995