GVU Brown Bag: Andy Begel, Microsoft Research

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Event Details
  • Date/Time:
    • Thursday February 4, 2010 - Friday February 5, 2010
      11:00 am - 11:59 am
  • Location: Technology Square Research Building, Auditorium
  • Phone:
  • URL:
  • Email:
  • Fee(s):
    $0.00
  • Extras:
Contact
Renata Le Dantec
College of Computing
Contact Renata Le Dantec
Summaries

Summary Sentence: Begel discusses Codebook, a social networking web service

Full Summary: Begel discusses Codebook, a social networking web service in which people can be “friends” not only with other people but with the work artifacts they share with them

Abstract: Social networking systems help people maintain connections to their friends, enabling awareness, communication, and collaboration, especially at a distance. In many studies of coordination in software engineering, we have learned that work artifacts, e.g. code, bugs, specifications, are themselves the objects that link engineers together. In this talk, I introduce Codebook, a social networking web service in which people can be “friends” not only with other people but with the work artifacts they share with them. Providing a variety of user interfaces to the graph of these connections will enable software engineers to keep track of task dependencies, discover and maintain connections to other teams, and understand the history and rationale behind the code that they work on and use.

Bio: Andrew Begel is a researcher in the Human Interactions in Programming group at Microsoft Research, Redmond, USA. He studies software engineers at Microsoft to understand how they communicate, collaborate and coordinate, and how this impacts their effectiveness in collocated and distributed development. After conducting studies, he builds collaboration tools to help mitigate the issues that were discovered.

The GVU Center at Georgia Tech is university-wide, interdisciplinary research center that encompasses a number of individual colleges at Georgia Tech as well as external collaborators. GVU focuses on unlocking and amplifying human potential through technical innovation in computing technologies. GVU faculty and students are drawn from disciplines in science, engineering, as well as the humanities and design. The Center enables collaborative research that is often difficult to achieve in traditional academic and industrial settings.

After more than a decade and half of practicing interdisciplinary research, GVU has gained an international recognition in 3D Compression, Animation, Augmented Reality, Collaborative Work, Educational Technologies, Gaming, Graphics, Human-Computer Interaction, Information Visualization, New Media, Online Communities, Perception, Robotics, Ubiquitous Computing, Virtual Reality and Wearable Computing.

Additional Information

In Campus Calendar
No
Groups

Digital Lounge - Digital Life, Digital Lounge

Invited Audience
No audiences were selected.
Categories
Seminar/Lecture/Colloquium
Keywords
bag, begel, Brown, GVU, Microsoft
Status
  • Created By: David Terraso
  • Workflow Status: Draft
  • Created On: Feb 16, 2010 - 9:48am
  • Last Updated: Oct 7, 2016 - 9:49pm