TY - CONF T1 - Supporting Collaborative Help for Individualized Use T2 - Proceedings of the ACM Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems (CHI’11) Y1 - 2011 A1 - Huh, Jina A1 - Mark W. Newman A1 - Mark S. Ackerman KW - appropriation KW - collaborative help KW - configuration KW - customization KW - e-communities KW - individualized use KW - MythTV KW - pervasive systems KW - Q&A KW - social Q&A KW - tailorability AB -

In this paper, we seek to advance the research around utilizing collaborative help for supporting individualized use of technologies. We do this by shedding light on the ways that users of MythTV, a highly flexible open-source software system for home entertainment enthusiasts, collaboratively help one another in maintaining their individualized MythTV systems. Through an analysis of the MythTV user community’s mailing list archive, documentation, and wiki, along with user interviews, we discuss how the community utilizes configuration artifacts as proxies to easily mobilize and exchange knowledge. While exchanging concrete artifacts such as scripts and configuration files was seen to sometimes increase the efficiency of knowledge transfer, it also presented several challenges. Negotiating the transparency of configuration artifacts, navigating the customization and appropriation gulfs, and aligning usage trajectories all emerged as problematic areas. We discuss design implications that center around addressing these challenges. Our findings provide a a useful new perspective on how to support users in their individualized use of systems.

JF - Proceedings of the ACM Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems (CHI’11) UR - Complete ER -