The 36th ACM Hypertext Conference invites proposals for tutorials from active researchers and experienced tutors in academia, industry, and government agencies. Tutorials should cover state-of-the-art research and ideas, innovative developments,...
Late Breaking & Blue Skies – Call for Papers The late breaking and blue skies track welcomes submissions of original and unpublished work that is at an early stage, and/or ideas that do not fit the profile of a traditional Hypertext conference...
The INTR/HT (International Teaching and Research in Hypertext) is sponsored and supported by the ACM Hypertext Conference and ACM SIGWEB. The in-person Summer School will be held from September 13–14, 2025, followed by participation in the HT’25...
The 36th ACM Hypertext conference will be held in Chicago, USA, from September 15-19, 2025. This year's theme, "The World as Hypertext," aims to bring together state-of-the-art technology, creativity, society, and scholarship through the lens of...
Rutgers University will host the ACM Web Science Conference in 2025. The conference will take place in New Brunswick, New Jersey, USA, from May 20–23, 2025.
The ACM Web Conference Steering Committee is pleased to announce the details for the ACM WebConf series in 2026 and 2027 WebConf 2026 will take place in Dubai, UAE. The two General Co-chairs for this conference are Prof. Hakim Hacid from the...
The ACM Special Interest Group on Hypertext and the Web is a community of scholars, researchers, and professionals who study and use the concepts and technologies of linked information that were originally conceived as hypertext and are most famously realized on the Web. The SIGWEB community's interests range widely and include hypertext in all its forms, social networks, knowledge management, document engineering, digital libraries, and the Web as both an information tool and a social force. SIGWEB encourages innovative research, open discussion of new ideas and the development of methodologies and standards through conferences and a variety of communication resources for its members and the world.
Formerly known as SIGLINK, the Special Interest Group on Hypertext and the Web was created in 1989 to support the community participating in the annual ACM Hypertext Conference. Now in its third decade, SIGWeb has grown considerably and now sponsors six annual conferences of different sizes and covering a wide range of topics.