History Flow Updated — How Wikipedia Pages Evolve Part II
Permalink | Comment (0)Back on my “old blog”:1, I “wrote”:2 about an IBM research project called “_History Flow_”:3 that studied how Wikipedia pages evolve. Now there is a “multimedia presentation”:4 of the History Flow tool up on the web! Check it out, it’s kind of interesting to see the tool in action. The presenter is “Fernanda Viegas”:5 who is one of researchers who worked on creating the tool.
I originally found the History Flow presentation from a “post”:6 on Scoble’s blog about the “Social Computing Symposium 2005″:7. Here’s a “link”:8 to the full list of presentations from the symposium from Korby Parnell’s blog . Some more good stuff.
[8(Korby Parnells list of Social Computing Symposium multimedia presentations)]http://blogs.msdn.com/korbyp/archive/2005/06/27/433216.aspx
[7(Social Computing Symposium home page)]http://research.microsoft.com/workshops/SCS2005/
[6(Scobles post on the Social Computing Symposium presentations)]http://radio.weblogs.com/0001011/2005/06/27.html#a10495
[5(Fernanda Viegas home page)]http://web.media.mit.edu/~fviegas/
[4(History Flow multimedia presentation)]http://research.microsoft.com/workshops/scs2005/12224/default.htm
[3(IBMs History Flow Page)]http://researchweb.watson.ibm.com/history/index.htm
[2(Original Zoinger post on History Flow)]http://www.zoinger.com/archives/2005/04/06/19.11.38/
[1(The old Zoinger blog)]http://www.zoinger.com/old_blog.html
