No Code Required : Giving Users Tools to Transform the Web by Tessa Lau, Mira Dontcheva, Allen Cypher and Jeffrey Nichols (2010, Trade Paperback)

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NO CODE REQUIRED: GIVING USERS TOOLS TO TRANSFORM THE WEB By Allen Cypher & Mira Dontcheva & Tessa Lau & Jeffrey Nichols **BRAND NEW**.

About this product

Product Identifiers

PublisherElsevier Science & Technology
ISBN-10012381541X
ISBN-139780123815415
eBay Product ID (ePID)9038251315

Product Key Features

Number of Pages512 Pages
Publication NameNo Code Required : Giving Users Tools to Transform the Web
LanguageEnglish
SubjectProgramming / General, Internet / General, Social Aspects / Human-Computer Interaction
Publication Year2010
TypeTextbook
AuthorTessa Lau, Mira Dontcheva, Allen Cypher, Jeffrey Nichols
Subject AreaComputers
FormatTrade Paperback

Dimensions

Item Length9.2 in
Item Width7.5 in

Additional Product Features

Intended AudienceScholarly & Professional
LCCN2010-278694
Reviews"The web is becoming not only a venue for people to receive information but increasingly a place for them to create new forms of information and to share them. The transition in the role from being a passive consumer to an active consumer as well as contributor is made possible by exactly the kind of work described in this book." -- Dr. Margaret Burnett, Dept of Computer Science, Oregon State University"No Code Required presents . the latest thinking, research, and efforts to empower the masses . and provide people everywhere with the tools and capabilities to make the Web do what they want." - Chris Beard, Chief Innovation Officer, Mozilla, "The web is becoming not only a venue for people to receive information but increasingly a place for them to create new forms of information and to share them. The transition in the role from being a passive consumer to an active consumer as well as contributor is made possible by exactly the kind of work described in this book." -- Dr. Margaret Burnett, Dept of Computer Science, Oregon State University, "The web is becoming not only a venue for people to receive information but increasingly a place for them to create new forms of information and to share them. The transition in the role from being a passive consumer to an active consumer as well as contributor is made possible by exactly the kind of work described in this book." -- Dr. Margaret Burnett, Dept of Computer Science, Oregon State University "No Code Required presents . the latest thinking, research, and efforts to empower the masses . and provide people everywhere with the tools and capabilities to make the Web do what they want." - Chris Beard, Chief Innovation Officer, Mozilla, "The web is becoming not only a venue for people to receive information but increasingly a place for them to create new forms of information and to share them. The transition in the role from being a passive consumer to an active consumer as well as contributor is made possible by exactly the kind of work described in this book." -- Dr. Margaret Burnett, Dept of Computer Science, Oregon State University "No Code Required presents ... the latest thinking, research, and efforts to empower the masses ... and provide people everywhere with the tools and capabilities to make the Web do what they want." - Chris Beard, Chief Innovation Officer, Mozilla
Dewey Edition22
IllustratedYes
Dewey Decimal004.019
Table Of ContentIntroduction End User Programming on the Web Allen Cypher (IBM) Why We Customize the Web Robert Miller (MIT) I. End User Programming Languages for the Web Sloppy Programming Greg Little (MIT) Mixing the reactive with the personal: Opportunities for end user programming in Personal information management (system) Max Van Kleek (MIT) Going beyond PBD: A Play-by-Play and Mixed-initiative Approach (system) Hyuckchul Jung (Institute for Human and Machine Cognition) Rewriting the Web with Chickenfoot (system) Robert Miller (MIT) A Goal-Oriented Web Browser (system) Alexander Faaborg (Mozilla) II. Systems and Applications Clip, Connect, Clone: Combining Application Elements to Build Custom Interfaces for Information Access (system) Jun Fujima (Hokkaido) Mash Maker (system) Robert Ennals (Intel) Collaborative scripting on the web (system) Tessa Lau (IBM) Programming by a Sample: Rapidly Creating Web Applications with d.mix (system) Björn Hartmann (Stanford) Highlight: End User Mobilization of Existing Web Sites (system) Jeffrey Nichols (IBM) Subjunctive Interfaces for the Web Aran Lunzer (University of Copenhagen) From Web Summaries to Search Templates: Automation for Personal Web Content (system) Mira Dontcheva (Adobe Systems) Access to the Temporal Web Through Zoetrope (system) Eytan Adar (University of Washington) Enabling End Users to Independently Build Accessibility into the Web Jeffrey Bigham (University of Washington) Social Accessibility: A Collaborative Approach For Improving Web Accessibility (system) Yevgen Borodin (Stony Brook) III. Data Management and Interoperability A World Wider than the Web: End User Programming Across Multiple Domains (system) Will Haines (SRI) Knowing What You're Talking About: Natural Language Programming of a Multi-Player Online Game (system) Henry Lieberman (MIT) IV. User Studies Mashups for Web-Active End Users Nan Zang (Penn State) Mashed layers and muddled models: debugging mashup applications M. Cameron Jones (Yahoo!) Reuse in the world of end-user programmers Christopher Scaffidi (CMU) Using Web Search to Write Programs Joel Brandt (Stanford)
SynopsisNo Code Required presents the various design, system architectures, research methodologies, and evaluation strategies that are used by end users programming on the Web. It also presents the tools that will allow users to participate in the creation of their own Web. Comprised of seven parts, the book provides basic information about the field of end-user programming. Part 1 points out that the Firefox browser is one of the differentiating factors considered for end-user programming on the Web. Part 2 discusses the automation and customization of the Web. Part 3 covers the different approaches to proposing a specialized platform for creating a new Web browser. Part 4 discusses three systems that focus on the customized tools that will be used by the end users in exploring large amounts of data on the Web. Part 5 explains the role of natural language in the end-user programming systems. Part 6 provides an overview of the assumptions on the accessibility of the Web site owners of the Web content. Lastly, Part 7 offers the idea of the Web-active end user, an individual who is seeking new technologies. The first book since Web 2.0 that covers the latest research, development, and systems emerging from HCI research labs on end user programming tools Featuring contributions from the creators of Adobe's Zoetrope and Intel's Mash Maker, discussing test results, implementation, feedback, and ways forward in this booming area, This edition is the first re-edition since the London-edition of 1618 and actually the first modern translation of Thomas Bradwardine's most important theological work, which presents philosophically and theologically relevant excerpts from De causa Dei. De causa Dei is one of the most influential theological writings from the 14th century, in which Bradwardine explores among other subject matters such as the divine foreknowledge, the predestination and human free will, all crucial issues of intellectual discussions in medieval Oxford. A rediscovery of these questions and of Bradwardine's position is intended by this re-edition of his work., No Code Required presents the various design, system architectures, research methodologies, and evaluation strategies that are used by end users programming on the Web. It also presents the tools that will allow users to participate in the creation of their own Web. Comprised of seven parts, the book provides basic information about the field of end-user programming. Part 1 points out that the Firefox browser is one of the differentiating factors considered for end-user programming on the Web. Part 2 discusses the automation and customization of the Web. Part 3 covers the different approaches to proposing a specialized platform for creating a new Web browser. Part 4 discusses three systems that focus on the customized tools that will be used by the end users in exploring large amounts of data on the Web. Part 5 explains the role of natural language in the end-user programming systems. Part 6 provides an overview of the assumptions on the accessibility of the Web site owners of the Web content. Lastly, Part 7 offers the idea of the Web-active end user, an individual who is seeking new technologies.
LC Classification NumberQA76.9.H85

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