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The Disappearing Computer [electronic resource] :Interaction Design, System Infrastructures and Applications for Smart Environments / edited by Norbert Streitz, Achilles Kameas, Irene Mavrommati.

by Streitz, Norbert [editor.]; Kameas, Achilles [editor.]; Mavrommati, Irene [editor.]; SpringerLink (Online service).
Material type: materialTypeLabelBookSeries: Lecture Notes in Computer Science: 4500Publisher: Berlin, Heidelberg : Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2007.Description: XVIII, 304 p. online resource.ISBN: 9783540727279.Subject(s): Computer science | Software engineering | Information storage and retrieval systems | Information systems | Multimedia systems | Computer Science | User Interfaces and Human Computer Interaction | Information Systems Applications (incl.Internet) | Multimedia Information Systems | Information Storage and Retrieval | Software Engineering | Computers and SocietyDDC classification: 005.437 | 4.019 Online resources: Click here to access online
Contents:
I: Interacting within Smart Spaces -- Smart Artefacts as Affordances for Awareness in Distributed Teams -- From the Disappearing Computer to Living Exhibitions: Shaping Interactivity in Museum Settings -- Opening the Digital Box for Design Work: Supporting Performative Interactions, Using Inspirational Materials and Configuring of Place -- Spatial Computing and Spatial Practices -- II: Designing for the Home and Social Activities -- Co-designing Communication Technology with and for Families – Methods, Experience, Results and Impact -- Assembling Connected Cooperative Residential Domains -- Intrusiveness Management for Focused, Efficient, and Enjoyable Activities -- III: System Architecture and Infrastructures -- Towards Ubiquitous Computing Applications Composed from Functionally Autonomous Hybrid Artifacts -- Towards Dynamic and Cooperative Multi-device Personal Computing -- An Attention-Based Architecture for Context Switch Detection -- IV: Augmenting Physical Artefacts -- Emerging Sounds for Disappearing Computers -- Electronically Functional Fibre Technology Development for Ambient Intelligence -- Augmented Paper: Developing Relationships Between Digital Content and Paper.
In: Springer eBooksSummary: “The-computer-as-we-know-it” will have no role in our future everyday lives. This is the position taken in this book which elaborates how it will be replaced by a new generation of technologies, moving computing off the desktop and ultimately integrating it with real world objects and everyday environments. Computing becomes thus an inseparable part of our everyday activities while simultaneously disappearing into the background. It becomes a ubiquitous utility taking on a role similar to electricity – an enabling but invisible and pervasive medium revealing its functionality on request in an unobtrusive way and supporting people’s everyday activities. As members of the Steering Group of the EU-funded Disappearing Computer research initiative, the editors of this book successfully assembled a collection of 13 elaborate chapters and three forewords that address the issues and challenges in this area. All authors are prominent researchers who set out investigating, developing and deploying future, people-centred smart environments. This book provides a unique combination of concepts, methods and prototypes of ubiquitous and pervasive computing reflecting the current interest in smart environments and ambient intelligence. Excerpts from the three forewords for the book: Thierry van der Pyl and Thomas Skordas from the European Commission state that: The Disappearing Computer initiative anticipated and pioneered the concept of ambient intelligence … and allowed to advance the boundaries of what is possible with the computer today. Gregory Abowd from GeorgiaTech in the US writes about this research: While substantial progress was shown on the creation of information artefacts, it is the new behaviors and user experiences that promise long-term impact. Finally, Emile Aarts from Philips Research comments on the relationship of ambient technology and people’s behavior: "This current volume undoubtedly provides a major contribution to fill up this gap of knowledge."
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I: Interacting within Smart Spaces -- Smart Artefacts as Affordances for Awareness in Distributed Teams -- From the Disappearing Computer to Living Exhibitions: Shaping Interactivity in Museum Settings -- Opening the Digital Box for Design Work: Supporting Performative Interactions, Using Inspirational Materials and Configuring of Place -- Spatial Computing and Spatial Practices -- II: Designing for the Home and Social Activities -- Co-designing Communication Technology with and for Families – Methods, Experience, Results and Impact -- Assembling Connected Cooperative Residential Domains -- Intrusiveness Management for Focused, Efficient, and Enjoyable Activities -- III: System Architecture and Infrastructures -- Towards Ubiquitous Computing Applications Composed from Functionally Autonomous Hybrid Artifacts -- Towards Dynamic and Cooperative Multi-device Personal Computing -- An Attention-Based Architecture for Context Switch Detection -- IV: Augmenting Physical Artefacts -- Emerging Sounds for Disappearing Computers -- Electronically Functional Fibre Technology Development for Ambient Intelligence -- Augmented Paper: Developing Relationships Between Digital Content and Paper.

“The-computer-as-we-know-it” will have no role in our future everyday lives. This is the position taken in this book which elaborates how it will be replaced by a new generation of technologies, moving computing off the desktop and ultimately integrating it with real world objects and everyday environments. Computing becomes thus an inseparable part of our everyday activities while simultaneously disappearing into the background. It becomes a ubiquitous utility taking on a role similar to electricity – an enabling but invisible and pervasive medium revealing its functionality on request in an unobtrusive way and supporting people’s everyday activities. As members of the Steering Group of the EU-funded Disappearing Computer research initiative, the editors of this book successfully assembled a collection of 13 elaborate chapters and three forewords that address the issues and challenges in this area. All authors are prominent researchers who set out investigating, developing and deploying future, people-centred smart environments. This book provides a unique combination of concepts, methods and prototypes of ubiquitous and pervasive computing reflecting the current interest in smart environments and ambient intelligence. Excerpts from the three forewords for the book: Thierry van der Pyl and Thomas Skordas from the European Commission state that: The Disappearing Computer initiative anticipated and pioneered the concept of ambient intelligence … and allowed to advance the boundaries of what is possible with the computer today. Gregory Abowd from GeorgiaTech in the US writes about this research: While substantial progress was shown on the creation of information artefacts, it is the new behaviors and user experiences that promise long-term impact. Finally, Emile Aarts from Philips Research comments on the relationship of ambient technology and people’s behavior: "This current volume undoubtedly provides a major contribution to fill up this gap of knowledge."

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