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|   | Ubiquitous Interaction Devices"Building tomorrow's technology on today's hardware"
 |   |  Overview
In recent years, the mobile phone market has grown tremendously,
giving the average consumer access to cheap, small, low-powered and
constantly networked devices that they reliably carry around.
Similarly, laptop computers and PDAs have become a common accessory
for businesses to equip their employees with when on the move.
 
The Ubiquitous Interaction Devices project seeks innovative
ways to extend these commodity devices to make some of the concepts
in the last decade of ubiquitous computing research a reality
(e.g. context-aware or location-aware interfaces).
 
Current projects include:
 
SpotCode Interfaces take advantage of modern camera-phones,
  which offer a programmable interface to allow real-time image processing,
  as well as Bluetooth to facilitate local wireless networking.  This
  project demonstrates how camera phones can be used as a sophisticated pointing
  device facilitating interaction with both active and passive displays
  in the environment.
Audio-Networking uses ubiquitously available sound
hardware (i.e, speakers, soundcards and microphones) for low-bandwidth
wireless networking.  It has a number of characteristics which 
differentiate it from existing wireless technologies:
 
  It offers fine-grained control over the range of transmission
   by adjusting the volume.
  Walls of buildings are typically designed to attenuate sound
   waves, making it easy to contain transmission to a single room.
  It allows existing devices that play or record audio to be
   networked easily (e.g. voice recorders).
 Computer/Telephone Integration connects a 
  desktop telephone to a personal computer's soundcard, enabling the PC
  to support collaborative applications that react according to what the
  user is doing with their phone, and who the user is talking to.  An
  example application is an audio-conferencing application which augments
  a normal teleconference with a visual interface which lists the call
  participants, gives cues about the current speaker, and recent history of
  conversation.(web pages coming soon)
 Publications
Ubiquitous Computing needs to catch up with Ubiquitous Media
Anil Madhavapeddy and Nick Ludlam
 To appear in the proceedings of the Pervasive 2005 UbiApps workshop, May 2005
 [PDF]
[Bibtex]
Using Smart Phones to Access Site-Specific Services
Eleanor Toye, Richard Sharp, Anil Madhavapeddy and David Scott
 To appear in the IEEE Pervasive Computing Special Issue on the Smart Phone, April-June 2005
Using Visual Tags to Bypass Bluetooth Device Discovery
David Scott, Richard Sharp, Anil Madhavapeddy and Eben Upton
 In the ACM Mobile Computing and Communications Review (MC2R) Special Section on Discovery and Interaction of Mobile Services, January 2005
 [PDF]
[Bibtex]
Using Camera-Phones to Enhance Human-Computer Interaction
Anil Madhavapeddy, David Scott, Richard Sharp and Eben Upton
 In the adjunct proceedings of the Sixth International Conference on Ubiquitous Computing
 [PDF]
Context-Aware Computing with Sound
Anil Madhavapeddy, David Scott, and Richard Sharp
 In the Proceedings of the Fifth International Conference on Ubiquitous Computing (UBICOMP-2003), October 2003.
 [PDF]
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