Thursday, 22 October 2009

Article on photo sharing in New Scientist

The New Scientist has just published an article about our work on using proximity regions around mobile phones to share photographs. Michael has put together a web page about the approach, which has a video and a couple of images explaining how it works.

Kray, C., Rohs, M., Hook, J., Kratz, S. Bridging the gap between the Kodak and Flickr generations: a novel interaction technique for collocated photo sharing. International Journal of Human-Computer Studies. (in press) [link]

Thursday, 15 October 2009

Ubicomp '09 videos online

Ubicomp '09 was held recently in Orlando, Florida. The proceedings are available on the ACM site now, and the organisers have also uploaded the videos from the video track on the conference web site.

Saturday, 19 September 2009

Tutorials at mobile HCI

This was the second year that there was a full day of tutorials at mobile HCI, and the slides are quite a good resource for anyone, who's interested in a particular topic in mobile HCI.

  • Enrico has uploaded the slides from this year here
  • Albrecht is hosting the slides from last year on his blog
Should be a good read for anyone looking for related work or a head start in a particular area.

Friday, 18 September 2009

Mobile HCI 2009


Mobile HCI is held at Bonn this year, with quite a few papers (that Albrecht is summarising nicely in his blog). I'd like to add the one on GraspZoom by Miyaki and Rekimoto, which I thought was a very simple yet effective and practical solution to overcome the problem of using touchscreen-based phones with one hand. Calli also presented our paper, which was based on her MSc thesis which she completed last year. I guess she also found out the hard way that a good way to make sure you get many questions after your talk is to finish ahead of time.


Partially due to the CHI deadline yesterday, the demand for caffeine was quite high amongst many of the participants but luckily, there was an ample supply of nice coffee places right next to the conference site. The photo to the right shows 'Einstein Kaffee', which does not only serve pretty good coffee in a decidely retro-chic style but which probably can claim to be the unofficial second site for mobile HCI this year.

Friday, 28 August 2009

Lots of visitors, towards fully mouldable devices

It's a busy week in terms of visitors: Albrecht came up again to talk about the TUI design project we've been working on for a while. He gave a well-attended talk at the School, where he was discussed the potential, challenges and implications of a world saturated with displays and sensors. Both Tanja and Bastian from his group were here as well, and we made great progress in preparing a prototype for the workshop we'll be running in two weeks' time. On Wednesday night, Nic Villar joined the party and brought with him the rapid prototyping toolkit for electronic devices as well as a sample of a material that opens up interesting design possibilities.


He showed us how easy it is to create devices using his toolkit. The hardware side comes down to connecting various parts using thin standardised cables, and the software side is fully integrated with Visual Studio, so its a matter of selecting classes from contextual menus. He built a device integrating a rotary control and a small OLED screen and had it up and running in less than five minutes. Quite impressive (and also highly complementary to what we've been working on around here). It's easy to imagine how this could be very useful to physically prototype devices very quickly.

The other surprise he pulled out of his bag was a material I hadn't heard about before, Polymorph. It a plastic-like granulate that sticks together and becomes formable at around 60 degrees Celsius. When it cools down it becomes rigid again. The process is repeatable numerous times without any apparent deterioration of the material (unlike Fimo or Hama beads, which once heated and cooled can't be changed anymore). We all had quite a good time playing with it. This obviously has quite a bit of potential not only with respect to prototyping physical shapes but also with respect to create objects that physically change shape...

Friday, 26 June 2009

Where do you think you are going?


Yesterday, I attended a one-day workshop discussing 'digital' transport, its challenges and where things may go in the future. The event was called 'Where do you think you are going?', and it was not only very well organised but also very interesting. There were talks from a very varied set of people, and the format (and venue) chosen made sure you didn't end up falling into a coma after a half-day of powerpoint slides. Most presenters only had five minutes to talk and were then 'waved' off by the chair/the audience.

There were a couple of talks discussing datasets, their importance and the problems relating to them (ownership, quality, user-created content). Nick Illsley (CEO Transport Direct) talked about how often data is updated, how setting up a database of bus stops for the UK resulted in 20,000 further bus stops being 'discovered' and the problems resulting from integrating data owned by a large number of companies. Then there were a number of talks about user-generated content/next gen web services and some discussion about where that might lead e.g. in terms of interacting with users of (public) transport, the need for real-time information and the detection of problems such as traffic jams.

My talk was about pedestrian navigation and whether it is a 'solved problem'. I gave a couple of examples why things don't look all that solved if you start looking at the results you get from a standard navigation service for pedestrian navigation. In a way, I think that pedestrian navigation is something like a glue that connects all the other means of transportation, so optimising it and linking it up with other means is essential in making transport in general more sustainable. (I think the slides will end up on SlideShare at some point.)

I hope that some of these issues will be tackled in the context of the Hub for Digital Economy, which will start in Autumn and which has a Transport component as well. The photo shows Phil Blythe giving a brief overview over the Hub - it also shows the venue, which in the time of the industrial revolution used to be a terminal for trains taking materials and goods back and forth between the mill and the Tyne.

Update: The slides are now online at SlideShare.

Saturday, 23 May 2009

The Path to a different game space

While looking for material for the module I'm teaching on Game Engineering, I recently came across an indie game called The Path from Tale of Tales. It is a fascinating, thought-provoking, and engaging game for a number of reasons, including beautiful graphics, incredible music and sound effects and a clever 'story'. Much has been said about how it pushes the boundaries of games in several ways, many reviewers take it is a clear proof that games can be art.



There are two things I found particularly interesting in the Path (scientifically speaking): the way in which you interact and the way in which its creators use space in a very innovative way. As a player, you interact with objects in the game by stopping to interact, i.e. by letting go of the keyboard/mouse, while being near an object of interest. This is a very interesting take on implicit interaction.

As the game is loosely based on the Little Red Riding Hood fairy tale, it is somehow part of the story that the player gets lost in the forest. The way this is achieved is by a clever speed-dependent camera control: when you start to run it zooms out in such a way that you look at the character from a bird's perspective. The key thing is that you can't see the horizon anymore, so it is very difficult to know where you are going, and occasionally, the character ever so slightly strays off the direction set by the user, e.g. when avoiding trees. In addition, parts of the world are no longer visible if you move at high speed. The world also changes (partially) depending on which character you play and where you are with respect to the path. Occasionally, you can only reach the safety of the path by standing still and waiting for someone to take you there. There is a map but it only appears briefly after you have moved a considerable distance and it only shows your past trajectory and not the sites of interest. Taken together, these concepts result in a game space that is designed so that you loose your way, pretty much regardless of how systematic you go about exploring it, which is not only a quite innovative approach to space in games but also an integral part of the 'story'.

Thursday, 2 April 2009

Albrecht Schmidt visits


Today, Albrecht Schmidt came up from Nottingham to visit for a day. As most of the people from the lab were down in Nottingham for the Ubicomp Spring School, we had space 2 almost to ourselves and Albrecht took the opportunity to test drive our new racing vehicles. The rest of the day we spent planning for Albrecht's visiting professorship here at Newcastle (which recently got funding for). The topic we are working on has really great potential in all sorts of ways (i.e. it'll get Europe straight out of the recession ;) and I'm looking forward to seeing it all come together.

Tuesday, 3 March 2009

Eva Hornecker visits

Last week Eva Hornecker visited our lab to have a chat about collaborating and to have a look at what's going on here in Newcastle. She also gave a talk, which presented some interesting (and somewhat unexpected) results from a study on collocated collaboration around a tabletop system. Specifically, the study looked at the impact of input devices (single mouse vs. multiple mice vs. single touch vs. multitouch) on people's awareness of what other people were doing. One of the key findings (in my eyes) was that although there might be more instances of people interfering with one another using multitouch interaction, they were able to very quickly recover from it, which might be (at least partially) due to increased awareness in this condition. They published a paper on this study at CSCW last year.

Sunday, 15 February 2009

Java and media (surprisingly cumbersome)

I've been looking into playing videos inside a Java Panel, which turned much more difficult than I thought. I first tried the Java Media Framework, but it only plays a very limited set of media (and not very well - particularly on a Mac). I've then looked at JavaFX, which looked really promising on the web site. After wrestling with the installation for a bit and getting to grips with the language, I discovered that controlling any JavaFX component from Java is considered a hack and not really easy to do - despite the whole thing being based on Java. I can't quite understand why that is the case but well. So, I went back to Quicktime for Java, and after downgrading my project from JDK1.6 to 1.5, I was able to play movies again. This is of course not a great solution at all but will work for the demonstrator I'm currently building. I really hope SUN get their act together and provide some simple API to play media in Java (it seems like JavaFX would work well if only they decided to do it)...

Sunday, 18 January 2009



Michael Rohs (right) and Sven Kratz (middle) from Deutsche Telekom Labs came over from Berlin for a three day visit this week to discuss projects, ideas and where to go next from what Michael and I have been working on over last one and a half years. Together with John Dawson (left), who's just started his PhD with me (literally - he started on Monday), we had some intense and quite productive brainstorming sessions to map out interesting areas of research. It'll take some time to sort through the all, but we managed to come up a good plan for the coming months and deadlines.

While they were here, Michael and Sven also got the usual round of demos including the ambient kitchen, all the different tabletop systems we've got assembled in Culture Lab, a very tiny glimpse a Jayne's digital jewellery (she wasn't there) as well as the CAVE (immersive video and a bit of VR). On the photo, John, Sven and Michael are just about to embark on some life-size Quake-type experience - properly outfitted with the stylish shutter glasses required for the 'true' 3D experience...