Tag: research

Ubicomp 2007 first impressions

I’m at Ubicomp 2007 in Innsbruck at the moment. On Sunday, I presented our paper on Making Bits and Atoms Talk Today at the DIPSO 2007 workshop. The workshop was great with a lot of interesting discussions.

Today we had a session on Health, one on Networking, the late-breaking results, videos and demos, and of course the 1-Minute-Madness. The latter featured some funny moments when presenters still wanted to get noticed and stand out between the rest of the participants when their presentations failed. Unfortunately I did not take pictures, but I’m sure others did. Considering the content of the talks, both at the workshop and at the main conference it seemed that persuasive games are becoming a popular research topic.

A really impressive and useful system I saw today was Haggle. It tries to abstract the lower-level network protocols, allowing you for example to send an email to someone sitting next to you without requiring an internet connection (falling back on Bluetooth or ad-hoc P2P networking).

During the poster and demo session, there was one cool demo stand that almost constantly had about ten people standing around it: VoodooSketch. The authors presented a drawing program on an interactive table that allows you to draw your own user interface widgets, combined with tangible controls (buttons, knobs, etc.). You can attach these to a function by writing a label next to it. So you could for example write the label opacity next to a line you drew, which would then turn into a slider to control the opacity of the drawing.

The city of Innsbruck is very beautiful and offers you some of the most amazing views. The room the DIPSO workshop was held in had a large window looking out to the mountains which made it hard to stay concentrated

DIPSO 2007 paper accepted

The paper we submitted to DIPSO 2007 (a workshop at this year’s Ubicomp conference) has been accepted.

Title: Making Bits and Atoms Talk Today – A Practical Architecture for Smart Object Interaction

Authors: Jo Vermeulen, Ruben Thys, Kris Luyten and Karin Coninx

Overview figure for "Making Bits and Atoms Talk Today" paper at DIPSO 2007

Abstract:
Bringing together the physical and digital worlds has been the subject of research for some time now. In particular, a number of successful prototypes that link physical objects with digital information (often called smart object systems) have already been presented. However, a generally accepted architecture to design such systems has not yet emerged. This paper presents a reusable and practical framework for developing smart object applications today. At the basis of our approach lies the use of Semantic Web technology to drive interaction between the physical and digital worlds. We used this framework
to develop SemaNews, a novel application that combines the advantages of digital news feeds with those of physical newspapers. We prove that our architecture is reusable by building a second prototype in a different application domain: STalkingObjects implements the basic components of a store of the future.

Venue and date: Innsbruck, Austria, September 16, 2007

Google Scholar library search and BibTeX links

After looking into the preferences of Google Scholar, I found out that it’s possible to let it search our university’s public library (providing access to Scientific American, Springer LNCS, etc.). I just had to enter “Hasselt University”, and could add it as a library link. Another useful option is to have it provide links to BibTeX citations.

Google Scholar - UHasselt search and BibTeX display

WoSSIoT’07 paper accepted

On Monday I got the notification that our submission for WoSSIoT’07 was accepted. This means I have to travel to Lisbon and Salamanca (for EIS 2007) in the same week

The paper is titled Tangible Mashups: Exploiting Links between the Physical and Virtual World. More details on my publications page.

EIS 2007 program available

A preliminary program for EIS 2007 is online. I will be presenting in the session on Models for Reasoning from 09:00 to 13:00 on Saturday, March 24.

We sent in the camera-ready version of our paper yesterday, after an unpleasant experience with trying to convert our original LaTeX version to a Word document. Fortunately, it took us less time than expected thanks to Yves who wrote a few Word macros to help with the conversion.

I’m looking forward to the conference. The list of accepted papers seems interesting.