Abstract

Understanding human thinking is crucial in the design and evaluation of human-computer interaction. Computing devices and applications are at this moment employed ahead of the desktop, in dissimilar environments, and this tendency toward ubiquitous computing is gathering speed. As computers become major necessity and having connectivity widespread, we are increasingly becoming competent to access computer power, data, information and knowledge from anyplace and at anytime. Conversely, in order to fetch the benefits of such accessible intelligence (commonly known as ‘ERP’ or a latest buzzword in a contemporary scenario and in the field of information technology too); we should not overlook the ongoing evolutions and revolutions in human-computer communications and its interfaces. Indeed, as the human factors of information systems and knowledge systems emerge as a research area in and of itself, it is thoughtful to go on board on this electrifying field of study. The operation of the Human-Computer with a flavour of ERP is to encourage interdisciplinary study and education in user-centered computer systems. The location of ERP is to make interactive and intelligent human-computer interfaces, in order to effectively enable users to accomplish their desired tasks. This paper present a personal outlook of the HCI landscape in a historical perspective. The paper also aims part to support newcomers in the filed to grasp the origins of HCI and in part to provide grounds for a discussion of the field of usability that is being challenged by the social and cultural developments (Jorgensen 2000). This paper has argued that in order to properly understand the interaction between ERP system and human computer interactions networks one must scrutinize the mutual flows of influence and the dynamic interaction between the two. Thus to bridge this gap, the paper critically reviews the existing ERP in a humanity context and upgrade decision-drivers, synthesizes a framework based on the literature, and extends the framework as necessary. At last but not least the paper show-off a personal, historical overview of these develoments in accompanying ERP system as seen form a HCI perspective.

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