

Author: Zimmerman Muriel
Publisher: Society for Technical Communication
ISSN: 0049-3155
Source: Technical Communication, Vol.48, Iss.2, 2001-05, pp. : 200-205
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Abstract
Technical communicators create support products that mediate between people and their computers. However, human-computer relations of the future may not require the reading of manuals or even direct manipulation of the interface. These relations may be delegated to agents, computer surrogates that possess a body of knowledge about something and about the user in relation to that something. A new class of applications may suggest information relevant to the user’s situation, proactively offering advice that the user didn’t know to ask for. Technical communicators will have continuing roles in enabling users because of their knowledge of the ways that people want to learn from machines. The skills required for technical communicators in the next computer revolution will change at least as much in the next 5 years as they have in the past 5 years.
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