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John Noll

Researcher at University of East London

Publications -  66
Citations -  1593

John Noll is an academic researcher from University of East London. The author has contributed to research in topics: Software development & Social software engineering. The author has an hindex of 19, co-authored 66 publications receiving 1432 citations. Previous affiliations of John Noll include University of Southern California & University of Limerick.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Global software development and collaboration: barriers and solutions

TL;DR: It is found that the key barriers to collaboration are geographic, temporal, cultural, and linguistic distance; the primary solutions to overcoming these barriers include site visits, synchronous communication technology, and knowledge sharing infrastructure to capture implicit knowledge and make it explicit.
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Toward Virtual Community Knowledge Evolution

TL;DR: This paper proposes augmenting a multimedia document repository with innovative knowledge evolution support, including computer-mediated communications, community process support, decision support, advanced hypermedia features, and conceptual knowledge structures, to provide an enhanced digital library infrastructure serving as an ever-evolving repository of the community's knowledge.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Distributed indexing: a scalable mechanism for distributed information retrieval

TL;DR: This research presents a probabilistic procedure that can be used to estimate the intensity of the response of the immune system to certain types of attacks.
Journal Article

Supporting Software Development in Virtual Enterprises

TL;DR: This paper describes how software process enactment can be achieved within a virtual enterprise without centralized mechanisms when the process description is represented as a user-navigable hypertext graph the nodes of which associate process steps, staff roles and associated tools with designated software products.
Journal ArticleDOI

Integrating diverse information repositories: a distributed hypertext approach

TL;DR: The authors address key problems of support for multiple, heterogeneous repositories, each under separate and autonomous administration with a variety of incompatible interfaces; diverse, unconventional data types; and different ways of viewing relations among the same information items through their distributed hypertext (DHT) architecture.