Pen-and-Paper User Interfaces [electronic resource] :Integrating Printed and Digital Documents / by Jürgen Steimle.
by Steimle, Jürgen [author.]; SpringerLink (Online service).
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Item type | Current location | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
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MAIN LIBRARY | T57-57.97 (Browse shelf) | Available |
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QA75.5-76.95 Adaptive and Natural Computing Algorithms | RL1-803 Color Atlas of Chemical Peels | QD1-999 Chemicals for Life and Living | T57-57.97 Pen-and-Paper User Interfaces | HF54.5-54.56 Architecture Principles | QA75.5-76.95 Adaptive and Natural Computing Algorithms | QB1-991 Environment and the Formation of Galaxies: 30 years later |
1.Introduction -- 2.-Survey of Pen-and-Paper Computing -- 3.Interaction Model of Pen-and-Paper User Interfaces -- 4.Collaborative Cross-media Annotation of Documents -- 5.Hyperlinking between Printed and Digital Documents -- 6.Paper-based Tagging of Documents -- 7.Conclusions -- References -- Index.
Even at the beginning of the 21st century, we are far from becoming paperless. Pen and paper is still the only truly ubiquitous information processing technology. Pen-and-paper user interfaces bridge the gap between paper and the digital world. Rather than replacing paper with electronic media, they seamlessly integrate both worlds in a hybrid user interface. Classical paper documents become interactive. This opens up a huge field of novel computer applications at our workplaces and in our homes. This book provides readers with a broad and extensive overview of the field, so as to provide a full and up-to-date picture of pen-and-paper computing. It covers the underlying technologies, reviews the variety of modern interface concepts and discusses future directions of pen-and-paper computing. Based on the author’s award-winning dissertation, the book also provides the first theoretical interaction model of pen-and-paper user interfaces and an integrated set of interaction techniques for knowledge workers. The model proposes a ‘construction set’ of core interactions that are helpful in designing solutions that address the diversity of pen-and-paper environments. The interaction techniques, concrete instantiations of the model, provide innovative support for working with printed and digital documents. They integrate well-established paper-based practices with concepts derived from hypertext and social media. Researchers, practitioners who are considering deploying pen-and-paper user interfaces in real-world projects, and interested readers from other research disciplines will find the book an invaluable reference source. Also, it provides an introduction to pen-and-paper computing for the academic curriculum. The present book was overdue: a thorough, concise, and well-organized compendium of marriages between paper-based and electronic documents. Max Mühlhäuser, Technische Universität Darmstadt Everyone interested in how to design for real-world activities would profit from reading this book. James D. Hollan, University of California, San Diego
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