02428oam 2200421zu 450 991014301610332120241212215526.097815090903101509090312(CKB)1000000000331616(SSID)ssj0000558273(PQKBManifestationID)12157896(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000558273(PQKBWorkID)10558819(PQKB)10496368(NjHacI)991000000000331616(EXLCZ)99100000000033161620160829d2007 uy engur|||||||||||txtccrEnabling Technologies; Infrastructure for Collaborative Enterprises; Proceedings: Workshops on Enabling Technologies; Infrastructure for Collaborative Enterprises (14th: 2005: Linköping, Sweden[Place of publication not identified]IEEE Computer Society Press20071 online resourceBibliographic Level Mode of Issuance: Monograph9780769528793 0769528791 The latest trends in distributed and mobile collaboration technologies allow people to move across team forms and organizational boundaries as well as to collaborate among/in organizations and communities. The ability to query the company's distributed knowledge base and to cooperate with co-workers is still a requirement, but new paradigms such as service-oriented computing increased pervasiveness, and mobility enable new scenarios and lead to higher complexity of systems. Independently of the business domain, private "collaboration" has become a hot issue. Virtual communities, may these be social networks or virtual enterprises, have enjoyed a tremendous popularity recently and are starting to require functionalities for collaboration in the broadest sense similar to those in business environments. The wide-spread availability of mobile devices makes support for mobility an arising topic in this domain as well.Concurrent engineeringConcurrent engineering.658.5PQKBPROCEEDING9910143016103321Enabling Technologies; Infrastructure for Collaborative Enterprises; Proceedings: Workshops on Enabling Technologies; Infrastructure for Collaborative Enterprises (14th: 2005: Linköping, Sweden2377293UNINA