116 research outputs found
Patterns of creation and usage of wikipedia content
This is the Post-print version of the Article. The official Published version can be accessed from the link below - Copyright @ 2012 IEEEWikipedia is the largest online service storing user-generated content. Its pages are open to anyone for addition, deletion and modifications, and the effort of contributors is recorded and can be tracked in time. Although potentially the Wikipedia web content could exhibit unbounded growth, it is still not clear whether the effort
of developers and the output generated are actually following patterns of continuous growth. It is also not clear how the users access such content, and if recurring patterns of usage are detectable showing how the Wikipedia content typically is viewed by interested readers. Using the category of Wikipedia as macro-agglomerates, this study reveals that Wikipedia categories face a decreasing growth trend over time, after an initial, exponential phase of development. On the other hand the study demonstrates that
the number of views to the pages within the categories follow a linear, unbounded growth.
The link between software usefulness and the need for software maintenance over time has been established by Lehman and other; the link betweenWikipedia usage and changes to the content, unlike software, appear to follow a two-phase evolution of production followed by consumption.This study is partly funded by the University of East London
On the sustainability of web systems evolution
In the last twenty years, the evolution of web systems has been driven along three dimensions: the processes used to develop, evolve, maintain and re-engineer the systems themselves; the end products (the pages, content and links) of such processes; and finally the people dimension, with the extraordinary shift in how developers and users shape, interact and maintain the code and content that they put online. This paper reviews the questions that each of these dimensions has addressed in the past, and indicates which ones will need to be addressed in the future, in order for web system evolution to be sustainable. We show that the study on websites evolution has shifted from server- to client-side, focusing on better technologies and processes, and that the users becoming creators of content open several open questions, in particular the issue of credibility of the content created and the sustainability of such resources in the long term
Engineering Advanced Training Environment for Crisis Management: The Pandora Project
The paper describes the technical framework of a near real-life training environment for learning activities suitable for training in crisis scenarios. The underlying architecture features a design that makes provision for a learning environment capable of training collaborative, as well as independent, decision making skills among crisis managers in potential crisis situations. Modelling the training scenarios takes into consideration both the pragmatic nature of responding to crisis, as well as the human behavioural factors involved in dealing with situations of chaos and uncertainty. This work is part of ongoing research on the Pandora1 project, which aims to provide a near-real training environment at affordable cost
Identifying and improving reusability based on coupling patterns
Open Source Software (OSS) communities have not yet taken full advantage of reuse mechanisms. Typically many OSS projects which share the same application domain and topic, duplicate effort and code, without fully leveraging the vast amounts of available code. This study proposes the empirical evaluation of source code folders of OSS projects in order to determine their actual internal reuse and their potential as shareable, fine-grained and externally reusable software components by future projects. This paper empirically analyses four OSS systems, identifies which components
(in the form of folders) are currently being reused internally and studies their coupling
characteristics. Stable components (i.e., those which act as service providers
rather than service consumers) are shown to be more likely to be reusable. As
a means of supporting replication of these successful instances of OSS reuse,
source folders with similar patterns are extracted from the studied systems, and
identified as externally reusable components. The intended users are members of
the OSS development community. Based on the empirical study of the OSS systems and observations made during the study, four practical courses of action are recommended in order to enhance the reusability of current folders that have not been identified as potentially reusable, both from an internal and external standpoint
Patterns of Creation and Usage of Wikipedia Content
Wikipedia is the largest online service storing user-generated content. Its pages are open to anyone for addition,deletion and modifications, and the effort of contributors is recorded and can be tracked in time.
Although potentially the Wikipedia web content could exhibit
unbounded growth, it is still not clear whether the effort
of developers and the output generated are actually following patterns of continuous growth. It is also not clear how the users access such content, and if recurring patterns of usage are detectable showing how the Wikipedia content typically is viewed by interested readers.
Using the category of Wikipedia as macro-agglomerates,
this study reveals that Wikipedia categories face a decreasing growth trend over time, after an initial, exponential phase of development. On the other hand the study demonstrates that the number of views to the pages within the categories follow a linear, unbounded growth.
The link between software usefulness and the need for software maintenance over time has been established by Lehman and other; the link betweenWikipedia usage and changes to the content, unlike software, appear to follow a two-phase evolution of production followed by consumption
Web-based communities for girls and women in IT: countering influences from home, school, and work through to retirement
Over half of the world’s population is female; and yet one of the most widely used systems for collaboration, the web, has far to go in meeting the needs of girls and women. The need for more women computer practitioners at both professional and user level can be addressed by exploiting web-based forums created by women and focused on meeting their needs. Within the U.K., the formation of a web-based specialist forum for female members of the BCS has significantly improved both informal and formal networking of women working in IT.
Various influences on females starting from their childhood through to adulthood can encourage or discourage their participation in computing, both as users and as professionals working with computers. Consideration is given to the root causes for the low percentage of women entering the Computer industry in the UK. Various national and local initiatives to encourage girls to take up IT and to support women in IT, all with a based-web presence, are discussed.
The BCSWomen web-based forum is presented as a case study of how Internet technology has been effectively employed to support an online community of women in IT and to address breaking down the barrier that discourages females from IT. There are still many challenges and there is much to be done in achieving greater numbers of women in IT, but the community that has grown out of the BCSWomen group’s initiative is actively engaged in addressing these challenges
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