@inproceedings{kaasten2001integrating, abstract = {Most Web browsers include Back, History and Bookmark facilities that simplify how people return to previously seen pages. While useful, these three facilities all operate on quite different underlying models, which undermines their usability. Our alternative revisitation system uses a single model of a recency-ordered history list to integrate Back, History and Bookmarks. Enhancements include: Back as a way to step through this list; implicit and explicit 'dog-ears' to mark pages on the list (replacing Bookmarks); searching/filtering the list through dynamic queries; and visual thumbnails to promote page recognition.}, address = {New York, NY, USA}, author = {Kaasten, Shaun and Greenberg, Saul}, booktitle = {CHI '01: CHI '01 extended abstracts on Human factors in computing systems}, interhash = {6f78c3258715fe82008530454538e7e6}, intrahash = {f99a12a83dfaedd7c1f998a4c428e26d}, lastdatemodified = {2005-08-06}, lastname = {Kaasten}, own = {own}, pages = {379--380}, pdf = {kaasten01.pdf}, publisher = {ACM Press}, read = {notread}, title = {Integrating back, history and bookmarks in web browsers}, url = {doi.acm.org/10.1145/634067.634291}, year = 2001 } @article{cockburn2002what, abstract = {This paper provides an empirical characterization of user actions at the web browser. The study is based on an analysis of 4 months of logged client-side data that describes user actions with recent versions of Netscape Navigator. In particular, the logged data allow us to determine the title, URL and time of each page visit, how often they visited each page, how long they spent at each page, the growth and content of bookmark collections, as well as a variety of other aspects of user interaction with the web. The results update and extend prior empirical characterizations of web use. Among the results we show that web page revisitation is a much more prevalent activity than previously reported (approximately 81% of pages have been previously visited by the user), that most pages are visited for a surprisingly short period of time, that users maintain large (and possibly overwhelming) bookmark collections, and that there is a marked lack of commonality in the pages visited by different users. These results have implications for a wide range of web-based tools including the interface features provided by web browsers, the design of caching proxy servers, and the design of efficient web sites.}, author = {Cockburn, A. and McKenzie, B.}, interhash = {94890d37b12720c1c42d17fa10d84638}, intrahash = {6eac954669f840aa9a9841e7b83dea52}, journal = {International Journal of Human-Computer Studies}, lastdatemodified = {2005-08-07}, lastname = {Cockburn}, longnotes = {Praesenzbestand in IIG-Bib: Standnummer: Frei 49: ZI 250- Interner Vermerk: Bestand: 40.1994 - 55.2001 - mb}, own = {own}, pages = {903--922}, pdf = {cockburn02.pdf}, read = {read}, title = {What do Web users do? An empirical analysis of Web use}, url = {http://.cosc.canterbury.ac.nz/andrew.cockburn/}, volume = 54, year = 2002 }