Revisiting Grudin’s eight challenges for developers of groupware technologies 30 years later

Melanie Duckert, Pernille Bjørn

    Research output: Conference Article in Proceeding or Book/Report chapterArticle in proceedingsResearchpeer-review

    Abstract

    In 1994, Jonathan Grudin wrote his famous paper Eight Challenges for Groupware Developers; The question is whether these challenges still persist, or have we moved on here 30 years later? We revisit the challenges empirically through ethnographic observations in two companies examining their work practices, organizational structure, and cooperative setups concerning their use of groupware technologies. Today, groupware is seamlessly integrated into organizations, considered essential infrastructure that becomes part of the daily work routine. Contextualizing the original challenges proposed by Grudin, we categorize them into cooperative challenges, social challenges, and organizational challenges, and refine their phrasings to reflect present and future considerations faced by developers of groupware technologies. While the main arguments of the social and organizational challenges remain consistent, we rephrase the cooperative challenges as emergent exception handling and exaggerated accessibility to reflect the emerging characteristics associated with the ubiquity and seamless integration of groupware.
    Original languageEnglish
    Title of host publicationi-com 2024
    Number of pages26
    PublisherDe Gruyter
    Publication dateMar 2024
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - Mar 2024

    Keywords

    • cooperative technologies
    • groupware
    • Future work
    • cooperative work
    • Distributed work
    • Hybrid work,

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