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CONFER is one of the first and one of the most sophisticated computer conferencing systems. It was developed in 1975 at the University of Michigan by then graduate student Robert Parnes.〔(''Empowering networks: computer conferencing in education'' ), Waggoner, Michael, Editor, Educational Technology Publications, Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey, USA, 1992, p 232.〕 The CONFER system continued to be a widely used communication tool until 1999.〔("Students Met Students on Confer U" ), Susan E. Topol, ''Information Technology Digest'', University of Michigan, September 8, 1997.〕 CONFER is the progenitor of the computer conferencing systems Caucus, PicoSpan, and YAPP.〔(Choosing Web Conferencing Software / Centralized Forums / Examples of WELL-style Web conferencing software ) by David R. Wolley in the ''International University Consortium Conference on WWW Course Development & Delivery'', 1996, and published in the book (''World Wide Web Unleashed'' ), John December (Ed.), 1997〕 == Origins and history == CONFER was developed in the mid-1970s when University of Michigan experimental psychology graduate student Bob Parnes attended a seminar where Professor Merrill M. Flood discussed aspects of electronic mail and conferencing on group decision making.〔(Biography section, Karl Zinn Papers ), Bentley Historical Library, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor.〕 Flood had a magnetic tape of a prototype system and approached Parnes about getting it to run on the Michigan Terminal System (MTS), the university's time-sharing system. Parnes declined, but offered instead to attempt writing a similar program for MTS.〔("MTS Fostered Creation of Computing Community" ), Information Technology Digest, May 13, 1996 (vol. 5, no. 5).〕 With encouragement from Fred Goodman and LeVerne Collet at the School of Education and Karl Zinn at the Center for Research on Learning and Teaching (CRLT), CONFER was developed. Because of a graduate teaching assistant strike, Parnes was temporarily relieved of his teaching duties and had some extra time to devote to his experimental system, which he called "CONFER".〔 MTS served as an excellent development environment for CONFER, which was built on top of the MTS file structure and exploited its file sharing features. According to Parnes, "I don't think I could have written CONFER anywhere but on MTS." MTS at U-M and later at Wayne State University (WSU) was a good match for CONFER because both systems were attached to the Merit Network and thus had a broader reach within Michigan via Merit and within the U.S. and internationally via Merit's interconnections to Telenet (later SprintNet), Tymnet, ADP's Autonet, and later still the IBM Global Network and the Internet. Parnes' vision of the system was one where the individual group participant would alternate between being a producer and being a consumer of information. The unique CONFER feature in this regard was initially the functionality of the "vote." This feature allowed the consumer to voice their "feelings" or opinion on a statement by voting. Parnes went on to form his own company — Advertel Communication Systems, Inc. — which marketed and supported CONFER.〔 The CONFER system continued to be a widely used communication tool until 1999. By this time, U-M, WSU, and the University of Alberta had moved from the Michigan Terminal System to distributed computing environments and several newer digital technologies replaced the functionality provided by CONFER.〔 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「CONFER (software)」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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