Search for dissertations about: "Mobile Interaction"
Showing result 1 - 5 of 176 swedish dissertations containing the words Mobile Interaction.
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1. In between mobile meetings : Exploring seamless ongoing interaction support for mobile CSCW
Abstract : This thesis is a collection of seven papers reporting a research effort that started in January 1999. The theme of the thesis is interaction support for mobile CSCW (Computer Supported Cooperative Work). READ MORE
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2. Live Mobile Video Interaction : Inventing and investigating technology, formats and applications
Abstract : The convergence of inexpensive video-enabled mobile phones, high-speed mobile data networks and ubiquitous sensing devices opens up a new design space called “live mobile video interaction”. It gives rise to a new genre of applications concerning live mobile video production, which can be seen as an instance of the said space. READ MORE
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3. Mobility is the Message : Experiments with Mobile Media Sharing
Abstract : This thesis explores new mobile media sharing applications by building, deploying, and studying their use. While we share media in many different ways both on the web and on mobile phones, there are few ways of sharing media with people physically near us. READ MORE
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4. In Romance with the Materials of Mobile Interaction : A Phenomenological Approach to the Design of Mobile Information Technology
Abstract : This thesis deals analytically and through design with the issue of HumanComputer Interaction (HCI) with mobile devices; mobile interaction. Specifically, it is an investigation into and a capitalization on the multistable kinds of relations that arise between the threefold of human user, artifact, and world, and how dealing with this kind of technology and these relations in many ways must be regarded as different from mainstream HCI. READ MORE
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5. Social Order of the Co-Located Mobile Phone : Practices of collaborative mobile phone use
Abstract : This thesis examines mundane practices of everyday phone use to make conceptual, empirical and methodological contributions to ongoing research on mobile technology. It argues that we do not yet have a clear understanding of how the mobile phone is used–who does what, when and why. READ MORE