posted on 2023-05-24, 09:53authored byDix, A, Quigley, AJ, Subramanian, S, Terrenghi, L
Interactive displays are increasingly distributed in a broad spectrum of everyday life environments: They have very diverse form factors and portability characteristics, support a variety of interaction techniques, and can be used by a variable number of people. The coupling of multiple displays can thus create interactive “ecosystems” which mingle in the social context, and generate novel settings of communication, performance and ownership. The objective of this workshop is to focus on the range of research challenges and opportunities afforded by applications that rely on visual interfaces that can spread across multiple displays. Such displays are physically decoupled (i.e. connected to multiple computers) yet are visually coupled due to the interfaces and interactions they support. This can range from visual interfaces spread across multiple small private input displays (e.g. information exchange or game play) to small private displays coupled with larger public displays (e.g. public photo sharing).
History
Publication title
Proceedings of the Workshop on coupled display visual interfaces (PPD10), in conjunction with AVI 2010
Editors
Dix, Quigley, Subramanian, Terrenghi
Pagination
1-2
Department/School
School of Information and Communication Technology
Publisher
UniPrint, University of Tasmania
Place of publication
Tasmania
Event title
Workshop on Coupled Display Visual Interfaces (PPD10)
Event Venue
Rome, Italy
Date of Event (Start Date)
2010-05-25
Date of Event (End Date)
2010-05-29
Rights statement
Copyright 2010 ACM
Repository Status
Open
Socio-economic Objectives
Expanding knowledge in the information and computing sciences