Academic literature on the topic 'Collaborative Editors'

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Journal articles on the topic "Collaborative Editors"

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De Sabbata, Stefano, Arzu Çöltekin, Kathryn Eccles, Scott Hale, and Ralph Straumann. "Collaborative Visualizations for Wikipedia Critique and Activism." Proceedings of the International AAAI Conference on Web and Social Media 9, no. 5 (2021): 11–16. http://dx.doi.org/10.1609/icwsm.v9i5.14692.

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Wikipedia is one of the largest platforms based on the concept of asynchronous, distributed, collaborative work. A systematic collaborative exploration and assessment of Wikipedia content and coverage is however still largely missing. On the one hand editors routinely perform quality and coverage control of individual articles, while on the other hand academic research on Wikipedia is mostly focused on global issues, and only sporadically on local assessment. In this paper, we argue that collaborative visualizations have the potential to fill this gap, affording editors to collaboratively explore and analyse patterns in Wikipedia content, at different scales. We illustrate how a collaborative visualization service can be an effective tool for editors to create, edit, and discuss public visualizations of Wikipedia data. Combined with the large Wikipedia user-base, and its diverse local knowledge, this could result in a large-scale collection of evidence for critique and activism, and the potential to enhance the quantity and quality of Wikipedia content.
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Winchester, Sonata. "Editors Note." Impact 2018, no. 3 (2018): 1. http://dx.doi.org/10.21820/23987073.2018.3.1.

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In this edition, covering a variety of topics across medical and dental research, as well as materials science and historical epidemiology, we see a strong representation of the value of international and interspecialty collaboration. This issue includes many such collaborative projects, including several projects that utilise developments in technology to further desired medical outcomes, combining the skills of experts in fields as varied as image and gesture interpretation research, systems and information engineering, rehabilitation engineering, medicine and occupational therapy.
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Pandey, Dharen Kumar. "Launching of the International Journal of Accounting, Business and Finance (IJABF)." International Journal of Accounting, Business and Finance 1, no. 1 (2022): i—iii. http://dx.doi.org/10.55429/ijabf.v1i1.22.

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With the collaborative support of the editorial board members, authors, reviewers, section editors, technical editors, and production editor, we have successfully managed to launch the inaugural issue of the International Journal of Accounting, Business and Finance (IJABF). The IJABF Volume 1 Issue 1 contains five articles dealing with contemporary issues. The authors try to unlock the research questions providing empirical results and the scope for future studies. I thank all the contributors to this issue.
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Pandey, Dharen Kumar. "Exploring the Intersection of Industry, Policy, and Performance: Insights from the June 2022 Issue." International Journal of Accounting, Business and Finance 1, no. 2 (2022): i—iii. http://dx.doi.org/10.55429/ijabf.v1i2.87.

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With the collaborative support of the editorial board members, authors, reviewers, section editors, technical editors, and production editor, we successfully launched the June 2022 issue of the International Journal of Accounting, Business and Finance (IJABF). The IJABF Volume 1 Issue 2 contains five articles dealing with contemporary issues. The authors try to unlock the research questions by providing empirical results and the scope for future studies. I thank all the contributors to this issue.
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Pandey, Dharen Kumar. "Advancing Financial Knowledge: Exploring Information Dynamics, Market Reactions, and Valuation Theories: Insights from the December 2022 Issue." International Journal of Accounting, Business and Finance 2, no. 1 (2022): i—ii. http://dx.doi.org/10.55429/ijabf.v2i1.109.

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With the collaborative support of the editorial board members, authors, reviewers, section editors, technical editors, and production editor, we successfully launched the December 2022 issue of the International Journal of Accounting, Business and Finance (IJABF). The IJABF Volume 2 Issue 1 contains four articles dealing with contemporary issues. The authors try to unlock the research questions by providing empirical results and the scope for future studies. I thank all the contributors to this issue.
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van Ham, Frank, and Fernanda B. Viegas. "Guest Editors' Introduction: Collaborative Visualization." IEEE Computer Graphics and Applications 29, no. 5 (2009): 20–21. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/mcg.2009.95.

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Krauß, Florian. "From ‘Redakteursfernsehen’ to ‘showrunners’: Commissioning editors and changing project networks in TV fiction from Germany." Journal of Popular Television 8, no. 2 (2020): 177–94. http://dx.doi.org/10.1386/jptv_00017_1.

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The Redakteur, the commissioning editor in TV fiction, has frequently been criticized in current public and industry-internal discourse on ‘quality’ series and the supposed lack of them in Germany. This article takes a closer look at this hardly examined but very important actor in German television. Based on expert interviews, it discusses how this profession is negotiated within the industry and how its role is changing in light of the broader transformation and transnationalization of the TV industry in Germany. Shifts in fictional content and its distribution have led to fundamental changes in the work of editors and their involvement in collaborative project networks. For example, the demand for ‘quality’ serials, ideally distributed in different countries, is accompanied by the adoption of writers’ room and showrunner models. Hence, the relationship between editor and screenwriter is transforming, too. The previous cooperation between editor and producer is also ripe for discussion, as signs point to a move away from 100 per cent financing by broadcasters, which was the rule in German television fiction for a long time. New financing models are negotiated in conjunction with online distribution, which fundamentally restructures the editor’s role. However, so far, linear broadcasting slots still form a central basis of editors’ work.
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Shah, Chirag, Robert Capra, and Preben Hansen. "Collaborative Information Seeking [Guest editors' introduction]." Computer 47, no. 3 (2014): 22–25. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/mc.2014.54.

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Zhang, Haisu, Sheng Zhang, Zhaolin Wu, Liwei Huang, and Yutao Ma. "A Method for Predicting Wikipedia Editors' Editing Interest." International Journal of Web Services Research 13, no. 3 (2016): 1–25. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/ijwsr.2016070101.

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Recruiting or recommending appropriate potential Wikipedia editors to edit a specific Wikipedia entry (or article) can play an important role in improving the quality and credibility of Wikipedia. According to empirical observations based on a small-scale dataset collected from Wikipedia, this paper proposes an Interest Prediction Factor Graph (IPFG) model, which is characterized by editor's social properties, hyperlinks between Wikipedia entries, the categories of an entry and other important features, to predict an editor's editing interest in types of Wikipedia entries. Furthermore, the paper suggests a parameter learning algorithm based on the gradient descent algorithm and the Loopy Sum-Product algorithm for factor graphs. An experiment on a Wikipedia dataset (with different frequencies of data collection) shows that the average prediction accuracy (F1 score) of the IPFG model for data collected quarterly could be up to 0.875, which is approximately 0.49 higher than that of a collaborative filtering approach. In addition, the paper analyzes how incomplete social properties and editing bursts affect the prediction accuracy of the IPFG model. The authors' results can provide insight into effective Wikipedia article tossing and can improve the quality of special entries that belong to specific categories by means of collective collaboration.
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Raposo, Alberto, and Cléber Corrêa. "Editors’ Note." Journal on Interactive Systems 8, no. 2 (2017): 1. http://dx.doi.org/10.5753/jis.2017.677.

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It is our pleasure to introduce you the second issue of JIS in 2017. This issue contains six papers of the Special Issue of the 15th Brazilian Symposium on Human Factors in Computing Systems (IHC 2016). As we have been doing since IHC 2014, the best papers of the conference are invited to submit extended versions to a special issue of JIS, guest edited by the conference program chairs. In the current publication, our guest editors are Profs. Carla Leitão, from Pontifícia Universidade Católica - Rio de Janeiro (PUC-Rio), and Luciana Salgado, from Universidade Federal Fluminense (UFF), who we thank a lot for the dedication in the preparation of this issue. We invited you to read their editorial in the following.We also have in this issue an original paper by Paulo Paiva, Liliane Machado, Jauvane de Oliveira, and Ronei de Moraes, entitled “Networking Issues for 3D Medical Collaborative Virtual Environments: Design and Applications”. The authors discuss specific networking issues for Collaborative Virtual Environments (CVEs) applied to the simulation of medical procedures. They designed, developed, and validated a peer-to-peer multicast architecture on the collaborative module of the CyberMed Virtual Reality framework, aiming at providing better network scalability.Finally, we would like to thank the authors and reviewers that contributed to JIS. At the end of the issue we acknowledge the reviewers that contributed to JIS in 2015, 2016, and 2017.JIS Editorial Board is looking forward to receiving your contributions. We hope you enjoy reading this issue!
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Collaborative Editors"

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Chérif, Asma. "Modèles de contrôle d'accès pour les applications collaboratives." Thesis, Université de Lorraine, 2012. http://www.theses.fr/2012LORR0217/document.

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L'importance des systèmes collaboratifs a considérablement augmenté au cours des dernières années. La majorité de nouvelles applications sont conçues de manière distribuée pour répondre aux besoins du travail collaboratif. Parmi ces applications, nous nous intéressons aux éditeurs collaboratifs temps-réel (RCE) qui permettent la manipulation de divers objets partagés, tels que les pages wiki ou les articles scientifiques par plusieurs personnes réparties dans le temps et dans l'espace. Bien que ces applications sont de plus en plus utilisées dans de nombreux domaines, l'absence d'un modèle de contrôle d'accès adéquat limite l'exploitation de leur plein potentiel. En effet, contrôler les accès aux documents partagés de façon décentralisée et sans alourdir les performances du système collaboratif représente un vrai challenge, surtout que les droits d'accès peuvent changer fréquemment et de façon dynamique au cours du temps. Dans cette thèse, nous proposons un modèle de contrôle d'accès générique basé sur l'approche de réplication optimiste du document partagé ainsi que sa politique de contrôle d'accès. Pour cela, nous proposons une approche optimiste de contrôle d'accès dans la mesure où un utilisateur peut violer temporairement la politique de sécurité. Pour assurer la convergence, nous faisons recours à l'annulation sélective pour éliminer l'effet des mises à jour illégales. Vu l'absence d'une solution d'annulation générique et correcte, nous proposons une étude théorique du problème d'annulation et nous concevons une solution générique basée sur une nouvelle sémantique de l'opération identité. Afin de valider notre approche tous nos algorithmes ont été implémentés en Java et testés sur la plateforme distribuée Grid'5000<br>The importance of collaborative systems in real-world applications has grown significantly over the recent years. The majority of new applications are designed in a distributed fashion to meet collaborative work requirements. Among these applications, we focus on Real-Time Collaborative Editors (RCE) that provide computer support for modifying simultaneously shared documents, such as articles, wiki pages and programming source code by dispersed users. Although such applications are more and more used into many fields, the lack of an adequate access control concept is still limiting their full potential. In fact, controlling access in a decentralized fashion for such systems is a challenging problem, as they need dynamic access changes and low latency access to shared documents. In this thesis, we propose a generic access control model based on replicating the shared document and its authorization policy at the local memory of each user. We consider the propagation of authorizations and their interactions. We propose a optimistic approach to enforce access control in existing collaborative editing solutions in the sense that a user can temporarily violate the access control policy. To enforce the policy, we resort to the selective undo approach in order to eliminate the effect of illegal document updates. Since, the safe undo is an open issue in collaborative applications. We investigate a theoretical study of the undo problem and propose a generic solution for selectively undoing operations. Finally, we apply our framework on a collaboration prototype and measure its performance in the distributed grid GRID?5000 to highlight the scalability of our solution
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Nguyen, Hoai Le. "Étude des conflits dans l'édition collaborative." Electronic Thesis or Diss., Université de Lorraine, 2021. http://www.theses.fr/2021LORR0005.

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L’édition collaborative (EC) a depuis longtemps attiré l’attention des chercheurs du Computer- supported-cooperative work (CSCW). Les premières recherches sur l’EC (dans les années 1990 et au début de 2000) se concentrent sur la description des différentes caractéristiques d’EC sur la base d’interviews de personnes qui avaient participé à certains projets d’EC. Certaines recherches récentes sur CE commencent à analyser les journaux des activités CE pour étudier comment les gens éditent ensemble avec le support des outils CE modernes tels que les systèmes de contrôle de version Git et Google Docs.D’un point de vue général, le processus d’EC est la synchronisation continue de ‘multiples, parallèles flux d’activités’ de collaborateurs. Si la synchronisation a lieu moins souvent, par exemple le développement d’un projet logiciel basé sur le système de contrôle de version Git, il est considéré comme un mode de travail ‘asynchronous’. Et si la synchronisation a lieu dans un petit intervalle, par exemple en éditant un document partagé dans ShareLaTex, il est considéré comme un mode de travail ‘synchronous’. Plus la divergence est longue, plus le conflit est susceptible de se produire pendant la synchronisation. La résolution des conflits coûte cher, surtout après une longue période de divergence. Il est important de comprendre la fréquence des conflits et la manière dont les utilisateurs résolvent les conflits dans de vrais projets CE pour garantir de bonnes performances et une expérience utilisateur dans l’édition collaborative. Dans la première partie de cette thèse, nous empruntons les traces de collaboration de quatre grands projets open source dans le système de contrôle de version Git pour mener notre analyse. Nous analysons différents types de conflits textuels qui surviennent au cours du développement et comment les développeurs résolvent ces types de conflits. En particulier concernant les ‘adjacent-line conflict’, nous avons constaté que les utilisateurs les résolvent principalement en appliquant les modifications des deux sites. En outre, nous analysons également la fréquence à laquelle les utilisateurs utilisent le ‘roll-back to previous version’ pour résoudre les conflits de fusion. Le processus de CE basé sur l’éditeur collaboratif en ligne est plus spécifique. Il peut être divisé en plusieurs ‘sessions’ d’édition qui sont effectuées par un seul auteur ou plusieurs auteurs. Ils sont notés respectivement ‘single-authored session’ et ‘co-authored session’. Ce processus de fragmentation nécessite un ‘intervalle’ ou ‘intervalle de temps maximal’ prédéfini qui n’est pas encore bien défini dans les études précédentes. Dans la deuxième partie de cette thèse, nous analysons les journaux des travaux CE d’un étudiant d’une école d’ingénieurs utilisant ShareLaTeX qui ont été collectés et anonymisés à des fins de confidentialité. En examinant différents ‘maximum time gap’ de 30 secondes à 15 minutes sur les journaux, nous avons constaté que nous pouvons déterminer un ‘maximum time gap’ approprié pour diviser les activités d’EC en sessions en évaluant la distribution de la ‘external-distance’. De plus, nous avons analysé les activités d’édition au sein de chaque ‘co-author session’. Nous empruntons une fenêtre de position temporelle de [30 secondes, 10 caractères] pour examiner ces cas de ‘potential conflict’. Le résultat montre que les gens éditent rarement de près dans les deux positions temporelles. Cependant, les conflits sont plus susceptibles de se produire dans ces cas<br>Collaborative Editing (CE) has long captured the attention of Computer-supported- cooperative work (CSCW) researchers. Early researches about CE (in the 1990s and the early 2000) focused on describing different characteristics of CE based on interviewing people who had participated in some CE projects. Some recent researches about CE started analyzing the logs of CE activities to study how people edit together with support of modern CE tools such as Git version control systems and Google Docs. From the general view point, the process of CE is the continuous synchronization of ‘multiple, parallel streams of activity’ of collaborators. If the synchronization takes place less often, for example the development of a software project based on Git version control system, it is considered as ‘asynchronous’ work mode. And if the synchronization takes place within a small interval, for example editing a shared document in ShareLaTex, it is considered as ‘synchronous’ work mode. The longer the divergence is, more conflicts are likely to happen during the synchronization. Resolving conflicts is costly, especially after a long period of divergence. Understanding how often conflicts happen and how do user resolve conflict in real CE projects is important to ensure good performance and user experience in collaborative editing. In the first part of this thesis, we borrow the collaboration traces of four large open source projects in Git version control system to conduct our analysis. We analyze different types of textual conflicts that arise during the development and how developers resolve these types of conflict. In particular regarding ‘adjacent-lines conflicts’, we found that users mostly resolve them by applying changes from both sites. Besides, we also analyze how often users use ‘roll-back to previous version’ as a way to resolve merge conflict. The process of CE based on online collaborative editor is more specific. It can be split into several ‘sessions’ of editing which are performed by a single author or several authors. They are denoted as ‘single-authored session’ and ‘co-authored session’ respectively. This fragmentation process requires a predefined ‘interval’ or ‘maximum time gap’ which is not yet well defined in previous studies. In the second part of this thesis, we analyze the logs of CE works of students of an Engineering School using ShareLaTeX which were collected and anonymized for privacy purpose. By examining different ‘maximum time gaps’ from 30 seconds to 15 minutes on the logs we found that we can determinate a suitable ‘maximum time gap’ to split CE activities into sessions by evaluating the distribution of the ‘external-distance’. Besides, we analysed the editing activities inside each ‘co-author sessions’. We borrow a [30 seconds, 10 characters] time- position window to examine these ‘potential conflict’ cases. The result shows that people rarely edit closely in both time-position. However, conflicts are more likely to happen in these cases
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Chérif, Asma. "Modèles de contrôle d'accès pour les applications collaboratives." Electronic Thesis or Diss., Université de Lorraine, 2012. http://www.theses.fr/2012LORR0217.

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L'importance des systèmes collaboratifs a considérablement augmenté au cours des dernières années. La majorité de nouvelles applications sont conçues de manière distribuée pour répondre aux besoins du travail collaboratif. Parmi ces applications, nous nous intéressons aux éditeurs collaboratifs temps-réel (RCE) qui permettent la manipulation de divers objets partagés, tels que les pages wiki ou les articles scientifiques par plusieurs personnes réparties dans le temps et dans l'espace. Bien que ces applications sont de plus en plus utilisées dans de nombreux domaines, l'absence d'un modèle de contrôle d'accès adéquat limite l'exploitation de leur plein potentiel. En effet, contrôler les accès aux documents partagés de façon décentralisée et sans alourdir les performances du système collaboratif représente un vrai challenge, surtout que les droits d'accès peuvent changer fréquemment et de façon dynamique au cours du temps. Dans cette thèse, nous proposons un modèle de contrôle d'accès générique basé sur l'approche de réplication optimiste du document partagé ainsi que sa politique de contrôle d'accès. Pour cela, nous proposons une approche optimiste de contrôle d'accès dans la mesure où un utilisateur peut violer temporairement la politique de sécurité. Pour assurer la convergence, nous faisons recours à l'annulation sélective pour éliminer l'effet des mises à jour illégales. Vu l'absence d'une solution d'annulation générique et correcte, nous proposons une étude théorique du problème d'annulation et nous concevons une solution générique basée sur une nouvelle sémantique de l'opération identité. Afin de valider notre approche tous nos algorithmes ont été implémentés en Java et testés sur la plateforme distribuée Grid'5000<br>The importance of collaborative systems in real-world applications has grown significantly over the recent years. The majority of new applications are designed in a distributed fashion to meet collaborative work requirements. Among these applications, we focus on Real-Time Collaborative Editors (RCE) that provide computer support for modifying simultaneously shared documents, such as articles, wiki pages and programming source code by dispersed users. Although such applications are more and more used into many fields, the lack of an adequate access control concept is still limiting their full potential. In fact, controlling access in a decentralized fashion for such systems is a challenging problem, as they need dynamic access changes and low latency access to shared documents. In this thesis, we propose a generic access control model based on replicating the shared document and its authorization policy at the local memory of each user. We consider the propagation of authorizations and their interactions. We propose a optimistic approach to enforce access control in existing collaborative editing solutions in the sense that a user can temporarily violate the access control policy. To enforce the policy, we resort to the selective undo approach in order to eliminate the effect of illegal document updates. Since, the safe undo is an open issue in collaborative applications. We investigate a theoretical study of the undo problem and propose a generic solution for selectively undoing operations. Finally, we apply our framework on a collaboration prototype and measure its performance in the distributed grid GRID?5000 to highlight the scalability of our solution
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Zafer, Ali Asghar. "NetEdit: A collaborative Editor." Thesis, Virginia Tech, 2001. http://hdl.handle.net/10919/32127.

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Centralized systems are easier to build and maintain as compared to completely distributed systems. However, distributed systems have the potential to be responsive and robust relative to centralized systems. This thesis proposes an architecture and concurrency algorithm for collaborative editing that lies between these extremes and preserves the advantages of both approaches while minimizing their shortcomings The Jupiter collaboration system at Xerox PARC uses a 2-party synchronization protocol for maintaining consistency between two users performing unconstrained edits to the document simultaneously. The primary goal of our work has been to extend this 2-party synchronization protocol to an n-way synchronization algorithm. NetEdit is a prototype collaborative editor built to demonstrate this n-way protocol. It uses a replicated architecture with the processing and data distributed across all the clients and the server. Due to replication, the response time of the local edits performed by the users is quite close to a single user editor. The clients do not need to be aware of other clients in the system since each of them synchronizes with their counterpart at the server. All communication regarding editing operations takes place through this server. As a result this system is quite scalable (linear growth) relative to distributed systems (quadratic growth) in terms of number of communication paths required as the number of clients grow. I discuss the details of this extension and illustrate it through an editing scenario. NetEdit uses groupware widgets (telepointers, and radarview) to distribute awareness information between participants. It supports completely unconstrained editing and allows late joining into a session. It does not assume any structure in terms of roles of participants or protocol for collaboration and thus allow users to form whatever protocol suits them. The results and conclusions derived from a preliminary usability study of NetEdit, discuss its efficacy. They also investigate the role of communication and its use in a groupware setting.<br>Master of Science
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Thai, Sonny. "Collaborative editor environments for player programs." Thesis, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 2012. http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/77006.

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Thesis (M. Eng.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, 2012.<br>Cataloged from PDF version of thesis.<br>Includes bibliographical references (p. 63).<br>Player programming competitions are becoming a more popular way of introducing students to programming as well as allowing more experienced coders to hone their skills. In these competitions, teams of individuals must work together to produce a software project that will compete against other teams' projects in a well defined test. Collaboration is crucial in the overall learning experience and in determining the quality of the project. Although there are no standardized set of collaborative tools that exist for player programming IDEs, this paper documents the steps taken to investigate the ideal collaborative tools for editing player programs. These tools are a combination of frontend and backend features. Initial testing shows positive feedback from users of older systems. Future work consists of larger scale testing to perfect the standardized collaborative toolset.<br>by Sonny Thai.<br>M.Eng.
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Citro, Sandy, and c1tro@yahoo com au. "A Framework for Real Time Collaborative Editing in a Mobile Replicated Architecture." RMIT University. Computer Science and Information Technology, 2008. http://adt.lib.rmit.edu.au/adt/public/adt-VIT20080424.113836.

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Mobile collaborative work is a developing sub-area of Computer Supported Collaborative Work (CSCW). The future of this field will be marked by a significant increase in mobile device usage as a tool for co-workers to cooperate, collaborate and work on a shared workspace in real-time to produce artefacts such as diagrams, text and graphics regardless of their geographical locations. A real-time collaboration editor can utilise a centralised or a replicated architecture. In a centralised architecture, a central server holds the shared document as well as manages the various aspects of the collaboration, such as the document consistency, ordering of updates, resolving conflicts and the session membership. Every user's action needs to be propagated to the central server, and the server will apply it to the document to ensure it results in the intended document state. Alternatively, a decentralised or replicated architecture can be used where there is no central server to store the shared document. Every participating site contains a copy of the shared document (replica) to work on separately. Using this architecture, every user's action needs to be broadcast to all participating sites so each site can update their replicas accordingly. The replicated architecture is attractive for such applications, especially in wireless and ad-hoc networks, since it does not rely on a central server and a user can continue to work on his or her own local document replica even during disconnection period. However, in the absence of a dedicated server, the collaboration is managed by individual devices. This presents challenges to implement collaborative editors in a replicated architecture, especially in a mobile network which is characterised by limited resource reliability and availability. This thesis addresses challenges and requirements to implement group editors in wireless ad-hoc network environments where resources are scarce and the network is significantly less stable and less robust than wired fixed networks. The major contribution of this thesis is a proposed framework that comprises the proposed algorithms and techniques to allow each device to manage the important aspects of collaboration such as document consistency, conflict handling and resolution, session membership and document partitioning. Firstly, the proposed document consistency algorithm ensures the document replicas held by each device are kept consistent despite the concurrent updates by the collaboration participants while taking into account the limited resource of mobile devices and mobile networks. Secondly, the proposed conflict management technique provides users with conflict status and information so that users can handle and resolve conflicts appropriately. Thirdly, the proposed membership management algorithm ensures all participants receive all necessary updates and allows users to join a currently active collaboration session. Fourthly, the proposed document partitioning algorithm provides flexibility for users to work on selected parts of the document and reduces the resource consumption. Finally, a basic implementation of the framework is presented to show how it can support a real time collaboration scenario.
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Tran, Augustin. "Encrypted Collaborative Editing Software." Thesis, University of North Texas, 2020. https://digital.library.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metadc1703311/.

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Cloud-based collaborative editors enable real-time document processing via remote connections. Their common application is to allow Internet users to collaboratively work on their documents stored in the cloud, even if these users are physically a world apart. However, this convenience comes at a cost in terms of user privacy. Hence, the growth of popularity of cloud computing application stipulates the growth in importance of cloud security. A major concern with the cloud is who has access to user data. In order to address this issue, various third-party services offer encryption mechanisms for protection of the user data in the case of insider attacks or data leakage. However, these services often only encrypt data-at-rest, leaving the data which is being processed potentially vulnerable. The purpose of this study is to propose a prototype software system that encrypts collaboratively edited data in real-time, preserving the user experience similar to that of, e.g., Google Docs.
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Brush, Alice Jane Bernheim. "Annotating digital documents for asynchronous collaboration /." Thesis, Connect to this title online; UW restricted, 2002. http://hdl.handle.net/1773/7003.

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Barrellon, Vincent. "A generic approach towards the collaborative construction of digital scholarly editions." Thesis, Lyon, 2017. http://www.theses.fr/2017LYSEI113/document.

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Les éditions critiques numériques sont des ressources patrimoniales annotées, sous une forme numérique. De telles éditions prennent la forme d'une transcription des ressources originales, augmentées d'un apparat critique, c'est-à-dire, la forme de données structurées. Dans un contexte collaboratif, a structure de ces données est définie explicitement par un schéma, document interprétable qui contraint la manière dont les éditeurs vont pouvoir annoter les ressources primaires et va de ce fait garantir une certaine homogénéité dans le respect de la politique éditoriale. Les projets d'édition critique numérique font classiquement face à deux problèmes techniques. Le premier a à voir avec l'expressivité des langages d'annotation, qui empêchent l'expression de certaines informations utiles. La seconde tient au fait que, par expérience, les schémas qui sous-tendent une édition critique vont être amenés à évoluer au cours de la réalisation de cette édition ; cependant, modifier le schéma implique qu'il faille mettre à jour l'intégralité des données structurées validées par ce schéma, ce qui est habituellement effectué à la main par les éditeurs, au moyen de scripts ad-hoc – si les éditeurs, faute de moyens ou de temps, ne renoncent pas à faire évoluer la structure de données. Dans ce travail de thèse, nous définissons les fondements théoriques pour l'établissement d'un système éditorial dédié à l'édition critique numérique. Nous définissons les eAG, un modèle d'annotation déporté basé sur un formalisme de graphes cycliques, autorisant a plus grande expressivité. Nous définissons un mécanisme de schéma innovant, SeAG, permettant la validation à la volée des eAG au cours de leur manufacture. Nous définissons également une syntaxe de balisage présentant des similarités avec les langages d'annotation classiques comme XML, tout en préservant l'expressivité des eAG. Enfin, nous proposons une algèbre bidirectionnelle pour les eAG de telle sorte que, si un SeAG S est transformé en un SeAG S', alors tout eAG I validé par S est traduit de manière semi-automatique sous la forme d'un eAG I', validé par S', et tel que toute mise à jour de I (respectivement I') soit propagé, de manière semi-automatique, sur I' (resp. I)<br>Digital Scholarly Editions are critically annotated patrimonial literary resources, in a digital form. Such editions roughly take the shape of a transcription of the original resources, augmented with critical information, that is, of structured data. In a collaborative setting, the structure of the data is explicitly defined in a schema, an interpretable document that governs the way editors annotate the original resources and guarantees they follow a common editorial policy. Digital editorial projects classically face two technical problems. The first has to do with the expressiveness of the annotation languages, that prevents from expressing some kinds of information. The second relies in the fact that, historically, schemas of long-running digital edition projects have to evolve during the lifespan of the project. However, amending a schema implies to update the structured data that has been produced, which is done either by hand, by means of ad-hoc scripts, or abandoned by lack of technical skills or human resources. In this work, we define the theoretical ground for an annotation system dedicated to scholarly edition. We define eAG, a stand-off annotation model based on a cyclic graph model, enabling the widest range of annotation. We define a novel schema language, SeAG, that permits to validate eAG documents on-the-fly, while they are being manufactured. We also define an inline markup syntax for eAG, reminiscent of the classic annotation languages like XML, but retaining the expressivity of eAG. Eventually, we propose a bidirectional algebra for eAG documents so that, when a SeAG S is amended, giving S', an eAG I validated by S is semi-automatically translated into an eAG I' validated by S', and so that any modification applied to I (resp. I') is semi-automatically propagated to I' (resp. I) – hence working as an assistance tool for the evolution of SeAG schemas and eAG annotations
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Zaccarelli, Chiara. "Analisi del comportamento degli utenti nell'utilizzo di Editor collaborativi per documenti di testo." Bachelor's thesis, Alma Mater Studiorum - Università di Bologna, 2016. http://amslaurea.unibo.it/10911/.

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L'elaborato si propone di analizzare il comportamento degli utenti nell'utilizzo di editor collaborativi per documenti di testo. La soluzione proposta è chiamata UICEM, uno strumento che include una versione modificata di Etherpad Lite per monitorare e memorizzare le azioni svolte dagli utenti, le quali poi vengono recuperate, analizzate e aggregate.
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Books on the topic "Collaborative Editors"

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Rodger, Kessler, and Stafford Dale, eds. Collaborative medicine case studies: Evidence in practice / Rodger Kessler, Dale Stafford, editors. Springer, 2008.

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Faberman, Hilarie. The art of collaborative printmaking: Smith Andersen Editions. Nevada Museum of Art, 1998.

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Black writers, white editors: Episodes of collaboration and compromise in Australian publishing history. Australian Scholarly Pub., 2009.

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1951-, Finch Richard D., and Rives Veda, eds. Marks from the matrix: Collaborative limited edition prints 1976-2006. Normal Editions Workshop, Illinois State University, 2007.

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Audiard, Jacques. L'art du montage: Comment les cinéastes et les monteurs réécrivent le film. Les Impressions nouvelles, 2017.

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Ross Roundtable on Critical Approaches to Common Pediatric Problems (27th 1995 Washington, D.C.). Environmental health: Report of the twenty-seventh Ross Roundtable on Critcal Approaches to Common Pediatric Problems in collaboration with the Ambulatory Pediatric Association ; [editor, Dorothy E. Redfern]. Ross Products Division, Abbot Laboratories, 1996.

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Erdal, Jennie. Ghosting: A memoir. Canoncate Books, 2004.

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Ross Roundtable on Critical Issues in Family Medicine (3rd 1994 Washington, D.C.). Caring for individuals with Down syndrome and their families: Report of the Third Ross Roundtable on Critical Issues in Family Medicine in collaboration with the Society of Teachers of Family Medicine / editor, Dorothy E. Redfern. Ross Products Division, Abbott Laboratories, 1995.

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Spiro, Neta, and Katie Rose M. Sanfilippo, eds. Collaborative Insights. Oxford University Press, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780197535011.001.0001.

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This book provides insight informed by interdisciplinary thinking on musical care throughout the life course. Musical care refers to the role of music—music listening as well as music-making—in supporting any aspect of people’s developmental or health needs: for example, physical and mental health, cognitive and behavioural development, and interpersonal relationships. Musical care can be seen as relevant to several types of music, approach, setting and stages of the life course. By introducing the term musical care, the editors of this book prioritize the overlapping areas of practice, engagement, and research that are widely applicable rather than the boundaries between them. The life course structure, from infancy to end of life, highlights the changing roles of musical care throughout our lives. The multifaceted nature of musical care requires bringing together perspectives and expertise from practice and research, from different fields and disciplines. This edited book shows interdisciplinary collaboration in action by assembling music practitioners and researchers to collaboratively write each chapter—each covering a stage during the life course—to discuss musical care from interdisciplinary perspectives, and to offer directions for future work. This book illustrates the wealth of understanding that can be gained from interdisciplinary collaboration in musical care. This is the start of a conversation and a call to action; a catalyst for new collaborations that will bring new insights to musical care throughout the life course.
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Nadler, Anthony M. Popularizing News 2.0. University of Illinois Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5406/illinois/9780252040146.003.0005.

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This chapter examines attempts to popularize and democratize news online through collaborative filtering. Collaborative filtering offers a means to replace the role of professional editors in setting the news agenda and deciding which stories deserve the most prominence. Instead of professional editors, collaborative filtering relies on algorithms to sort, rank, and prioritize the news based on the activity of large groups of web users. Various news sites have added some aspect of collaborative filtering, but the chapter focuses on social news sites (Reddit, Newsvine, and Slashdot) because they allow their users to make conscious voting choices about which stories should be most prominent. These sites epitomize the defining characteristics of the social Web and apply them to news.
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Book chapters on the topic "Collaborative Editors"

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Yarn, Molly G. "Edith Rickert’s Network of Women Editors." In Collaborative Humanities Research and Pedagogy. Springer International Publishing, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-05592-8_4.

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Imine, Abdessamad. "Coordination Model for Real-Time Collaborative Editors." In Lecture Notes in Computer Science. Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-02053-7_12.

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Shen, Haifeng, and Chengzheng Sun. "Collaborative Highlighting for Real-Time Group Editors." In Innovative Internet Computing Systems. Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2002. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/3-540-48080-3_4.

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Cherif, Asma, and Abdessamad Imine. "Undo-Based Access Control for Distributed Collaborative Editors." In Lecture Notes in Computer Science. Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-04265-2_14.

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Posey, Jack W. "Pictorial and Text Editors for the Collaborative Work Environment." In Information and Collaboration Models of Integration. Springer Netherlands, 1994. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-011-1132-4_18.

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Imine, Abdessamad, Asma Cherif, and Michaël Rusinowitch. "A Flexible Access Control Model for Distributed Collaborative Editors." In Lecture Notes in Computer Science. Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-04219-5_6.

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Randolph, Aurel, Abdessamad Imine, Hanifa Boucheneb, and Alejandro Quintero. "Specification and Verification Using Alloy of Optimistic Access Control for Distributed Collaborative Editors." In Formal Methods for Industrial Critical Systems. Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-41010-9_13.

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Rapp, Christian, Till Heilmann, and Otto Kruse. "Beyond MS Word: Alternatives and Developments." In Digital Writing Technologies in Higher Education. Springer International Publishing, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-36033-6_3.

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AbstractMicrosoft Word, the word processing software developed by Microsoft in 1983, established itself as the market leader in the 1990s and 2000s and remained the gold standard for many years. Despite its obvious benefits, it always faced criticism from various quarters. We address the persistent criticism that MS Word is overloaded with features and distracts from writing rather than facilitating it. Alternatives, mainly distraction-free editors and text editors for use with a markup language, are briefly reviewed and compared to MS Word. A serious challenger emerged in 2006 with Google Docs, a cloud-based writing software that has moved text production into the platform era, enabling files to be shared and creating collaborative writing spaces. Even though Google Docs failed to break the dominance of MS Word, it became the trend-setter in online writing. Microsoft and Apple soon followed by designing complex web environments for institutions and companies rather than individual writers. We give an overview of technologies that have evolved to challenge the supremacy of MS Word or compete for market share. By this, we hope to provide clues as to the future development of word processing.
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Seger, Linda. "The editor." In The Collaborative Art of Filmmaking. Routledge, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781351207072-6.

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Tolbert, Jeffrey A. "How to Make (and Possibly Un-Make) a Digital Monster." In Living with Monsters. punctum books, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.53288/0361.1.11.

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Digital monsters are not present in the “real” – in this case, non-digital – world in the same way as other supernatural creatures. These monsters are “born digital”; that is, they are created with digital tools within digital contexts (e.g., photo and video editors, websites), and are encountered in the genre of expressive culture now known as “Creepypasta,” transmedial, Internet-based narratives about scary, usually supernatural, things. The most famous digital monster is Slender Man, who, despite his fictional status, was cited as the inspiration for real-world acts of violence, most notably the attempted murder of a young girl in Wisconsin in 2014. Traceable to a single creator, but passing through a long, collaborative process of telling and retelling across various Internet fora and media, Slender Man embodies the emergent qualities of much Internet culture. The story of Mr. Top Hat presented here, framed as a series of blog posts by a fictional anthropologist and reader responses to them, attempts to represent the type of collaborative dynamic that produced and continually reproduces Slender Man. Like Slender Man, “Mr. Top Hat” is surrounded by ambiguity. Are aspects of his story real, despite the evidence of his fictional status? The anthropologist, Dr. Richard Morgan, starts off as a researcher of the social processes that give rise to Creepypasta, but quickly finds that there is more at stake than the creation of a story.
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Conference papers on the topic "Collaborative Editors"

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Ignat, Claudia-Lavinia, and Moira C. Norrie. "Grouping in collaborative graphical editors." In the 2004 ACM conference. ACM Press, 2004. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/1031607.1031682.

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Kleppmann, Martin, Victor B. F. Gomes, Dominic P. Mulligan, and Alastair R. Beresford. "Interleaving anomalies in collaborative text editors." In the 6th Workshop. ACM Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/3301419.3323972.

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Cherif, Asma, Abdessamad Imine, and Michaël Rusinowitch. "Optimistic access control for distributed collaborative editors." In the 2011 ACM Symposium. ACM Press, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/1982185.1982374.

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Du Li, Rui Li, Yingwei Yu, and Yi Yang. "Using familiar single-user editors for collaborative editing." In 36th Annual Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences, 2003. Proceedings of the. IEEE, 2003. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/hicss.2003.1173765.

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Imine, Abdessamad. "Decentralized concurrency control for real-time collaborative editors." In the 8th international conference. ACM Press, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/1416729.1416781.

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Imine, Abdessamad. "Flexible Concurrency Control for Real-Time Collaborative Editors." In 2008 28th International Conference on Distributed Computing Systems Workshops (ICDCS Workshops). IEEE, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/icdcs.workshops.2008.91.

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"Message from the WETICE 2016 Co-Editors." In 2016 IEEE 25th International Conference on Enabling Technologies: Infrastructure for Collaborative Enterprises (WETICE). IEEE, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/wetice.2016.72.

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Stancu, Florin-Alexandru, Mihai Chiroiu, and Razvan Rughinis. "SecCollab - Improving Confidentiality for Existing Cloud-Based Collaborative Editors." In 2017 21st International Conference on Control Systems and Computer Science (CSCS). IEEE, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/cscs.2017.51.

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Alsulami, Noha, Asma Cherif, and Abdessamad Imine. "Evaluating data convergence of collaborative editors in opportunistic networks." In 2017 6th International Conference on Information and Communication Technology and Accessibility (ICTA). IEEE, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/icta.2017.8336061.

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Abusalem, Olfa, Asma Cherif, and Abdessamad Imine. "Towards Optimistic Access Control for Cloud-Based Collaborative Editors." In 2019 IEEE/ACS 16th International Conference on Computer Systems and Applications (AICCSA). IEEE, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/aiccsa47632.2019.9035245.

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