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Aestheticodes: Beautiful Interaction
Speaker: Dr. Richard Mortier Cambridge University Title: "Aestheticodes: Beautiful Interaction" Date: Wednesday, 29 April 2015 Time: 4:30pm - 5:30pm Venue: Room 1504 (near lifts 25/26), HKUST Abstract: Interactive markers, from barcodes to QR codes, are now commonplace in the world around us. We see them on public transport, in shops, in restaurants, on products. Unfortunately, they are also basically ugly: designed to encode many bits and be robustly detectable by any reader in different environments, they are unwelcome in many environments. Image detection is an alternative approach but relies on recognising a relatively small set of predetermined images. In this research we explore encoding information in the topographic structure of the image, refining the approach taken by Costanza et al in the d-touch system. I will describe work we have done over the past three years in the Aestheticodes project to refine d-touch, to implement our system as iPhone and Android apps, and to work with a range of partners to create and deploy Aestheticodes in a variety of materials and contexts. I will also talk about some of the work that is currently ongoing. ***************** Biography: Richard Mortier is a member of faculty in the Systems Research Group at the Cambridge University Computer Lab. Past work includes Internet routing, distributed system performance analysis, network management, aesthetic designable machine-readable codes, and home networking. He works in the intersection of systems and networking with human-computer interaction, and is currently focused on how to build user-centric systems infrastructure that enables people to better support themselves in a ubiquitous computing world through Human-Data Interaction.