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personal

personal digital assistant

In Proceedings of UIST 2006
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Huddle: automatically generating interfaces for systems of multiple connected appliances (p. 279-288)

Abstract plus

Systems of connected appliances, such as home theaters and presentation rooms, are becoming commonplace in our homes and workplaces. These systems are often difficult to use, in part because users must determine how to split the tasks they wish to perform into sub-tasks for each appliance and then find the particular functions of each appliance to complete their sub-tasks. This paper describes Huddle, a new system that automatically generates task-based interfaces for a system of multiple appliances based on models of the content flow within the multi-appliance system.

personal digital assistant (pda)

In Proceedings of UIST 2002
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Generating remote control interfaces for complex appliances (p. 161-170)

Abstract plus

The personal universal controller (PUC) is an approach for improving the interfaces to complex appliances by introducing an intermediary graphical or speech interface. A PUC engages in two-way communication with everyday appliances, first downloading a specification of the appliance's functions, and then automatically creating an interface for controlling that appliance. The specification of each appliance includes a high-level description of every function, a hierarchical grouping of those functions, and dependency information, which relates the availability of each function to the appliance's state. Dependency information makes it easier for designers to create specifications and helps the automatic interface generators produce a higher quality result. We describe the architecture that supports the PUC, and the interface generators that use our specification language to build high-quality graphical and speech interfaces.

personal information management

In Proceedings of UIST 2006
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RecipeSheet: creating, combining and controlling information processors (p. 145-154)

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Many tasks require users to extract information from diverse sources, to edit or process this information locally, and to explore how the end results are affected by changes in the information or in its processing. We present the RecipeSheet, a general-purpose tool for assisting users in such tasks. The RecipeSheet lets users create information processors, called recipes, which may take input in a variety of forms such as text, Web pages, or XML, and produce results in a similar variety of forms. The processing carried out by a recipe may be specified using a macro or query language, of which we currently support Rexx, Smalltalk and XQuery, or by capturing the behaviour of a Web application or Web service. In the RecipeSheet's spreadsheet-inspired user interface, information appears in cells, with inter-cell dependencies defined by recipes rather than formulas. Users can also intervene manually to control which information flows through the dependency connections. Through a series of examples we illustrate how tasks that would be challenging in existing environments are supported by the RecipeSheet.

In Proceedings of UIST 2007
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Enabling efficient orienteering behavior in webmail clients (p. 139-148)

Abstract plus

Webmail clients provide millions of end users with convenient and ubiquitous access to electronic mail - the most successful collaboration tool ever. Web email clients are also the platform of choice for recent innovations on electronic mail and for integration of related information services into email. In the enterprise, however, webmail applications have been relegated to being a supplemental tool for mail access from home or while on the road. In this paper, we draw on recent research in the area of electronic mail to understand usage models and performance requirements for enterprise email applications. We then present an innovative architecture for a webmail client. By leveraging recent advances in web browser technology, we show that webmail clients can offer performance and responsiveness that rivals a desktop application while still retaining all the advantages of a browser based client.

In Proceedings of UIST 2007
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Gui --- phooey!: the case for text input (p. 193-202)

Abstract plus

Information cannot be found if it is not recorded. Existing rich graphical application approaches interfere with user input in many ways, forcing complex interactions to enter simple information, requiring complex cognition to decide where the data should be stored, and limiting the kind of information that can be entered to what can fit into specific applications' data models. Freeform text entry suffers from none of these limitations but produces data that is hard to retrieve or visualize. We describe the design and implementation of Jourknow, a system that aims to bridge these two modalities, supporting lightweight text entry and weightless context capture that produces enough structure to support rich interactive presentation and retrieval of the arbitrary information entered.

personal space

In Proceedings of UIST 1997
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A virtual office environment based on a shared room realizing awareness space and transmitting awareness information (p. 199-207)

personal technology

In Proceedings of UIST 2007
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Robust, low-cost, non-intrusive sensing and recognition of seated postures (p. 149-158)

Abstract plus

In this paper, we present a methodology for recognizing seatedpostures using data from pressure sensors installed on a chair.Information about seated postures could be used to help avoidadverse effects of sitting for long periods of time or to predictseated activities for a human-computer interface. Our system designdisplays accurate near-real-time classification performance on datafrom subjects on which the posture recognition system was nottrained by using a set of carefully designed, subject-invariantsignal features. By using a near-optimal sensor placement strategy,we keep the number of required sensors low thereby reducing costand computational complexity. We evaluated the performance of ourtechnology using a series of empirical methods including (1)cross-validation (classification accuracy of 87% for ten posturesusing data from 31 sensors), and (2) a physical deployment of oursystem (78% classification accuracy using data from 19sensors).

personal universal controller (puc)

In Proceedings of UIST 2002
Article Picture

Generating remote control interfaces for complex appliances (p. 161-170)

Abstract plus

The personal universal controller (PUC) is an approach for improving the interfaces to complex appliances by introducing an intermediary graphical or speech interface. A PUC engages in two-way communication with everyday appliances, first downloading a specification of the appliance's functions, and then automatically creating an interface for controlling that appliance. The specification of each appliance includes a high-level description of every function, a hierarchical grouping of those functions, and dependency information, which relates the availability of each function to the appliance's state. Dependency information makes it easier for designers to create specifications and helps the automatic interface generators produce a higher quality result. We describe the architecture that supports the PUC, and the interface generators that use our specification language to build high-quality graphical and speech interfaces.

In Proceedings of UIST 2006
Article Picture

Huddle: automatically generating interfaces for systems of multiple connected appliances (p. 279-288)

Abstract plus

Systems of connected appliances, such as home theaters and presentation rooms, are becoming commonplace in our homes and workplaces. These systems are often difficult to use, in part because users must determine how to split the tasks they wish to perform into sub-tasks for each appliance and then find the particular functions of each appliance to complete their sub-tasks. This paper describes Huddle, a new system that automatically generates task-based interfaces for a system of multiple appliances based on models of the content flow within the multi-appliance system.