@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 } @inproceedings{1622221, abstract = {The Web is a dynamic information environment. Web content changes regularly and people revisit Web pages frequently. But the tools used to access the Web, including browsers and search engines, do little to explicitly support these dynamics. In this paper we present DiffIE, a browser plug-in that makes content change explicit in a simple and lightweight manner. DiffIE caches the pages a person visits and highlights how those pages have changed when the person returns to them. We describe how we built a stable, reliable, and usable system, including how we created compact, privacy-preserving page representations to support fast difference detection. Via a longitudinal user study, we explore how DiffIE changed the way people dealt with changing content. We find that much of its benefit came not from exposing expected change, but rather from drawing attention to unexpected change and helping people build a richer understanding of the Web content they frequent.}, address = {New York, NY, USA}, author = {Teevan, Jaime and Dumais, Susan T. and Liebling, Daniel J. and Hughes, Richard L.}, booktitle = {UIST '09: Proceedings of the 22nd annual ACM symposium on User interface software and technology}, doi = {10.1145/1622176.1622221}, interhash = {507f0548966b5f8f50963822c8279211}, intrahash = {c4cb8b6a8573f285ec4d907dec856a18}, isbn = {978-1-60558-745-5}, location = {Victoria, BC, Canada}, pages = {237--246}, publisher = {ACM}, title = {Changing how people view changes on the web}, url = {http://portal.acm.org/citation.cfm?id=1622176.1622221}, year = 2009 }