DocumentCode :
283352
Title :
Modes, WYSIWYG and the von Neumann bottleneck
Author :
Thimbleby, Harold
Author_Institution :
Dept of Comput. Sci., York Univ., UK
fYear :
1988
fDate :
32195
Firstpage :
42461
Lastpage :
42465
Abstract :
Argues the case for the von Neumann correspondence: a correspondence between user interface design and computer system design. The von Neumann correspondence covers concepts from the technical to the conceptual; this should not surprise us, since programmers, in their efforts to interact with computers, first noticed the von Neumann bottleneck and its consequences. Programmers are now very active in developing novel concepts and questioning `self-evident´ truths (e.g. the necessity of explicit sequence): it is time to evaluate and adopt some of these ideas for user interface design, and it is time for user interface researchers to put some of the programmers´ claims to empirical scrutiny. Is it really the case that, say, functional programming is `easier´ than conventional imperative programming? If it is, or is in certain ways, then the relevant ideas can be carried over into user interfaces for more widespread appreciation. Whatever the final judgement on the new programming paradigms, it is clear that pursuing the von Neumann correspondence is likely to lead to innovation in user interface design-and, as a bonus, it may raise some programmer´s appreciation of user interface design problems
Keywords :
programming; user interfaces; WYSIWYG; computer system design; conceptual aspects; explicit sequence; functional programming; imperative programming; modes; programmers; technical concepts; user interface design; von Neumann bottleneck; von Neumann correspondence;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
iet
Conference_Titel :
Formal Methods and Human-Computer Interaction: II, IEE Colloquium on
Conference_Location :
London
Type :
conf
Filename :
209312
Link To Document :
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