Author: Matthew Lombard


  • Call: NAFEMS UK Conference 2012 – Engineering Simulation: Realising the Potential

    NAFEMS UK Conference 2012 Engineering Simulation: Realising the Potential http://www.nafems.org/events/nafems/2012/ukconf12/ Simulation has the potential to transform a company’s engineering processes – providing unprecedented insight into product performance and inspiring innovation by allowing novel concepts to be explored and evaluated. NAFEMS, the independent association for the engineering analysis community, is holding its UK conference during 30-31 May 2012 with the primary aim of helping attendees realise the full potential of their engineering simulation and analysis. The 2012 NAFEMS UK Conference will explore the extent to which this potential has now been realised, and what more can be achieved.…

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  • UMaine virtual reality lab creates simulated realities for navigation

    [From The University of Maine’s Maine Campus] [Image: Rob Stigile, Maine Campus features editor, tries on the Head Mounted Display at the VEMI lab. Photo by Jesse Scardina] Get plugged in UMaine virtual reality lab creates something from nothing By Robert Stigile Thursday, November 10th, 2011 Imagine you are in a Boston hotel room on the 20th floor when all of a sudden an explosion rocks the building, shattering glass and activating alarms of various kinds throughout the neighborhood. This emergency scenario presents a multitude of barriers on the path to safety: blocked exits, hallways engulfed in flames, streets closed…

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  • Call: Symposium on “Enhancing Human Experience via Emerging Technologies”

    Int’l Symposium on “Enhancing Human Experience via Emerging Technologies”, a CNRS project named “EpistHOMME+” 28 March 2012, Laval FRANCE Young and old alike believe that the human experience could gain something if better informed about up-coming technologies. Learning about them at an early stage helps in making key decisions about one’s personal future. Although the approach is somewhat individual and devoted to those concerned, collectively oriented health and entertainment will gain from observing individual practices in the matter. Government policy incorporating emergent technology progress through monitoring will renew itself in a relevant way. However, in the name of progress people…

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  • Researchers build computer monitor into contact lens

    [From IT World’s CoreIT blog; a related story can be found in New Scientist] Researchers build computer monitor into contact lens It’s only one pixel, but it gets the image and power wirelessly, and didn’t hurt the rabbit By Kevin Fogarty November 22, 2011 There have been a million science-fictioney stories, movies, photos and late-night caffeine-psychosis-induced hallucinations imagining how super-mobile, universally connected and unrealistically convenient computing will be in 10 years, or 20 or 50. None of them quite got past [the] barrier posed by the one component of any computer system that can’t shrink in size to a nanoparticle…

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  • Call: Workshop proposals for Pervasive Health 2012

    Call for Workshop Proposals The Pervasive Health 2012 Workshop Organizing Committee invites proposals for the workshop program of the 6th International ICST Conference on Pervasive Computing Technologies for Healthcare. Workshops provide a forum for people to discuss areas of special interest within pervasive computing related to health-specific applications. Workshops afford the participants the opportunity to examine an area with a selected focus in an open environment for the free exchange of views. Important Workshop Dates December 9, 2011 (23:59 EST): Workshop proposals deadline December 23, 2011: Notification of acceptance/rejection of workshop December 38, 2011: Workshop calls online (by the organizers)…

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  • Invoked computing – Device-free ubiquitous augmented reality

    [From DigInfo TV, where the story includes a 2:51 minute video; more information is available at the researchers’ web site] [Image: ‘Invoked Computing’ at home] Invoked Computing – Device-free Ubiquitous Augmented Reality 18 November 2011 A research group at the University of Tokyo are creating a new paradigm in Human Computer Interaction. Dubbed ‘Invoked Computing’ the idea is to turn everyday objects into computer interfaces and communication devices. “For example, if you make a gesture, the computer should be able to recognize this as “I want to use the telephone”. So with an iPhone for example, you have everything in…

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  • Call: HCI 2012 in Birmingham: People and Computers XXVI

    HCI 2012 Birmingham People and Computers XXVI You are invited to participate in HCI 2012, which will be held in the UK’s second city, Birmingham. Some History HCI 2012 is the 26th Annual Conference of the Specialist HCI group of the BCS, the BCS Interaction SG. Since its establishment in 1985, the conference has become the leading annual HCI conference in Europe. As well as being a leading venue for dissemination, the conference has a history of nurturing research careers- many of the leading HCI researchers published their early papers here and it is recognised for helping students and new…

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  • Artist Mikami Seiko’s tele-present water and wind

    [From SmartPlanet] World class robot art includes a telepresent ocean By Christie Nicholson | November 2, 2011 We are often followed by cameras as we go about our daily routines, getting cash, buying milk, throwing underwear into laundromat dryers, yet most of us routinely forget this fact. Want to get a more intense feeling of what it’s like to be tracked? Now through to December 18 you have your opportunity to let robots get closer to you at an art installation, Desire of Codes, at the InterCommunication Center in Tokyo’s Shinjuku district. The artist Mikami Seiko set up walls covered…

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  • Call: Transnational HCI: Humans, Computers and Interactions Considered Globally (special issue of Human-Computer Interaction)

    Call for Papers (for the full text of this call please see: http://www.itu.dk/people/irsh/THCIcfp.pdf) A special issue of Human-Computer Interaction “Transnational HCI: Humans, Computers and Interactions Considered Globally” Deadline for proposals: December 1, 2011 Special issue editors: Irina Shklovski IT University of Copenhagen, Denmark Janet Vertesi Princeton University, USA Silvia Lindtner University of California, Irvine, USA Lucy Suchman Lancaster University, UK HCI researchers are increasingly interested in understanding the role of technology in relation to global processes. ICT4D (Information and Communication Technologies for Development), emerging markets, new forms of mobility, and the internationalization of organizations dominate contemporary conversations about information and…

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  • New in schools: Learning via 3D

    [From The Wall Street Journal; a related article is available in THE Journal] [Image: Students at Monarch High School in Louisville, Colo., watch lessons in 3-D.] Coming Soon To Schools: Dissecting Frogs in 3-D By Michelle Kung September 7, 2011 When Maurio Medley, an eighth-grade math teacher at Ocoee Middle School in central Florida, wants to teach his students how to find the volume of a cylinder, he doesn’t turn to a textbook or chalkboard. Instead, he turns on a 3-D-enabled projector to rotate a virtual Euclidian solid. Schools are trying to keep up with the multiplex, keen to find…

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  • Call: Models asnd Simulations 5

    Call for papers MODELS AND SIMULATIONS 5 Helsinki, 14-16 June 2012 The Finnish Centre of Excellence in the Philosophy of the Social Sciences is delighted to host the 5th Models and Simulations (MS5) conference in Helsinki. Conference website: http://www.helsinki.fi/ms5 The previous MS meetings have taken place in Paris, Tilburg, Charlottesville, and Toronto. As before, the overall theme of the conference will be the philosophical and methodological issues of simulations and models, broadly construed. Papers on any aspect of this theme are welcome from both philosophers and practicing scientists. One focus of the 5th meeting will be on models and simulations…

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  • Virtual danger: Toronto lab recreates the world – and may revolutionize research

    [From The National Post] [Image: The “street lab” recreates the environment outside the hospital. Tyler Anderson / National Post.] Virtual danger: Toronto lab recreates the world — and may revolutionize research Tom Blackwell Nov 16, 2011 It looks like a typical, comfortably furnished one-bedroom condominium, with a few notable exceptions — the apartment has no ceiling, it is surrounded by a catwalk that lets scientists peer down at the occupants and the entire thing is situated in a downtown hospital. “Home lab,” as researchers at Toronto Rehabilitation Institute have dubbed their open-top apartment, is part of an impressive $36-million complex whose…

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