Back from a one week break!
Enabling A "Killer Ecology" in Mobile Computing
Joel Brandt (Stanford University)
Friday, May 11th, 3pm
Yahoo! Research Berkeley
1950 University Ave., Berkeley
http://upcoming.yahoo.com/event/184954/
ABSTRACT:
Already there are 2.5 billion mobile phones in active use today, in
comparison with an estimated 1 billion PCs. Yet the bulk of these
mobile phones are only used as communication devices, not as computing
devices. Many individuals and corporations are investing a large amount
of time and money to build the killer applications that will realize
this latent potential. We suggest, however, that the true potential of
mobile computing will be achieved not through a few killer
applications, but through a killer ecology of many small, niche
applications that are highly tailored to specific users' needs.
In this talk, I will discuss three topics central to enabling this
killer ecology: what, who, and how. First, I will approach the topic of
what
the space of desired mobile applications looks like. I will present a
classification of the design space of mobile computing applications,
born out of a need-finding study conducted with 23 participants. From
here, I will discuss who may be creating mobile applications in
the future, and how this affects our design of tools to support this
development. This discussion will be supported by a presentation of
Lash-Ups, a lightweight toolkit we have developed to enable programming
of location-aware mobile applications by amateur developers. Finally, I
will discuss how these applications should be built from an
interaction design perspective. Specifically, I will present five
issues central to the successful design of interactions for mobile and
attention-limited tasks, identified through our own work and through
interviews with five professional designers.
BIO:
Joel Brandt is a second-year Ph.D. student working with Professor Scott
Klemmer in the Stanford Human-Computer Interaction Group. His research
focuses on design and development tools for mobile applications. More
specifically, he is interested in understanding how to create tools
that empower amateur programmers. Before coming to Stanford, he
completed his B.S. and M.S. work at Washington University in St. Louis.
Upcoming Brain Jams:
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18 May 2007 - Diane Demee-Benoit (George Lucas Foundation) - The Global Warming Crisis: Causes, Consequences & Solutions
25 May 2007 - Rashmi Sinha (SlideShare) - The Perils of Popularity
1 June 2007 - Eric Paulos (Intel) - TBD
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