scispace - formally typeset
M

Mark J. Stefik

Researcher at PARC

Publications -  221
Citations -  17175

Mark J. Stefik is an academic researcher from PARC. The author has contributed to research in topics: Parking guidance and information & Topic model. The author has an hindex of 49, co-authored 220 publications receiving 16487 citations. Previous affiliations of Mark J. Stefik include Stanford University & Xerox.

Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

WYSIWIS revised: early experiences with multiuser interfaces

TL;DR: The design issues and choices that arose in the first generation of meeting tools based on WYSIWIS, a foundational abstraction for multiuser interfaces that expresses many of the characteristics of a chalkboard in face-to-face meetings, are presented.
Patent

System for controlling the distribution and use of rendered digital works through watermarking

TL;DR: A trusted rendering system as mentioned in this paper facilitates the protection of rendered digital works which have been rendered on a system which controls the distribution and use of digital works through the use of dynamically generated watermark information that is embedded in the rendered output.
Book

Introduction to knowledge systems

TL;DR: 1. Symbol Systems 2. Search and Problem Solving 3. Knowledge and Software Engineering 4. Systematic Representations: Representing Time, Space, Certainty, and Vagueness
Patent

Interactive contents revealing storage device

TL;DR: The DocuCard as discussed by the authors is a transportable unit having a nonvolatile storage means for storing information in a digital form, a control processor for processing user initiated functions; an I/O port for interfacing to external devices for reading and writing digital information, and a user interface for allowing a user to directly interact with the Docucard.
Journal ArticleDOI

Planning and meta-planning (MOLGEN: Part 2)

TL;DR: An approach to planning is described which integrates and extends two strategies termed the least-commitment and the heuristic strategies, and exposes and organizes a variety of decisions, which are usually made implicitly and sub-optimally in planning programs with rigid control structures.