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Demonstrations |
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Due date: July 12, 2002Demonstrations allow conference participants to view novel or noteworthy CSCW systems in action, discuss the systems with those who created them, and perhaps to try them out. Appropriate demonstrations include applications, technologies, research prototypes and products. Demonstrations are spaced around a large room and run concurrently within a set block of time, with attendees free to visit demos of interest. This promotes informal interaction and in-depth information exchange among demo presenters and attendees. This forum is not an opportunity for marketing or sales presentations. Presenters must have been directly involved with the development of the system and be able to explain the differentiating and novel contributions of the system. Demonstration proposals should be a maximum of 4 pages and should include an abstract no longer than 150 words. The proposal should include descriptions of the product, application, etc.; the kind(s) of cooperative work it is intended to support; the noteworthy and distinguishing ideas or approaches it embodies; and what will be shown in the demonstration. Also include information about the presenter(s), including their relationship to the project and a detailed description of needed space, equipment support, and Internet connectivity. Abstracts of accepted Demonstration proposals, formatted according to
the ACM SIGCHI Conference
Publications Format, will be published in a booklet that will be circulated
to attendees at the conference; they will not be incorporated into the
main CSCW 2002 conference proceedings. CSCW 2002 requires online submission. Please use the following link to make your submission: All questions should be directed to cscw2002-demos @ acm.org. All submissions must be received by the chairs by 5pm Pacific Standard
Time on Friday July 12, 2002. Submissions received after this date will
not be considered. All submissions will be acknowledged by email. Additional datesAugust 16, 2002: Notification of acceptance: Demos Co-ChairsRick Borovoy, MIT Media Lab, USA Beverly Harrison, IBM Almaden Research Center, USA |
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Last updated: June 4, 2002 |