| In this issue | | BIB | 4 | |
| Jonathan Arnowitz; Elizabeth Dykstra-Erickson | |||
| Prototyper archetypes | | BIB | 5 | |
| Tom Chi; Kevin Cheng | |||
| Loser-centered design | | BIB | 5-7 | |
| Jonathan Arnowitz; Elizabeth Dykstra-Erickson | |||
| A penny for your thoughts, a latte for your password | | BIB | 8-9 | |
| Fred Sampson | |||
| Letters to the editor | | BIB | 9 | |
| Jonathan Arnowitz; Elizabeth Dykstra-Erickson | |||
| Prototyping and plagiarism | | BIB | 11 | |
| Dr. Usability | |||
| A UI prototyping sampler | | BIB | 12-13 | |
| Michael Arent | |||
| The Excel Story | | BIB | 14-17 | |
| Nevin Berger | |||
| Presumptive design, or cutting the looking-glass cake | | BIB | 18-20 | |
| Leo Frishberg | |||
| Prototyping with junk | | BIB | 21-23 | |
| Nancy Frishberg | |||
| Developing the drift table | | BIB | 24-27 | |
| Andrew Boucher; William Gaver | |||
| Interface in form: paper and product prototyping for feedback and fun | | BIB | 28-30 | |
| Bruce M. Hanington | |||
| Revisiting tangible speculation: 20 years of UI prototyping | | BIB | 31-32 | |
| Daniel Rosenberg | |||
| Pack wisely and remember the local voltage: connecting across the globe | | BIB | 33-36 | |
| Laura Erickson | |||
| The next frontier of users' preferences: content customization | | BIB | 38-39 | |
| Fabio Vitali | |||
| To consolidate or distribute?: that is the question | | BIB | 41-44 | |
| Linn Johnk; Meera Manahan; Tom Graefe | |||
| Interaction design is still an art form.: ergonomics is real engineering | | BIB | 45-60 | |
| Donald A. Norman | |||
| Are we having fun yet?: computers as entertainment objects | | BIB | 46-60 | |
| Dennis Wixon | |||
| Sketching in hardware | | BIB | 47-60 | |
| Lars Erik Holmquist | |||
| Dashboards in your future | | BIB | 48-60 | |
| Aaron Marcus | |||
| Review of "Access by Design by Sarah Horton", New Riders, 2005, ISBN: 032131140X, $24.99 | | BIB | 50-52 | |
| Robert Douglass | |||
| New & upcoming titles | | BIB | 51 | |
| Gerard Torenvliet | |||
| Is HCI homeless?: in search of inter-disciplinary status | | BIBAK | Full-Text | 54-59 | |
| Jonathan Grudin | |||
| Depending on how you look at it, human-computer interaction has either no
home or many homes. We're multidisciplinary without having become particularly
interdisciplinary. The first HCI papers were Human Factors & Ergonomics, which
is often located in Industrial Engineering departments. Business and Management
schools then initiated relevant Information Systems research. CHI originally
comprised mainly Cognitive Psychologists, with an influx from Computer Science
some years later. HCI is now on the rise in Information and Design schools and
departments. Keywords: HCI History | |||
| Event planner | | BIB | 58 | |
| Building a bridge between research and practice | | BIB | 63 | |
| Carolyn Gale | |||
| Doomsday | | BIB | 64 | |
| Atticus Wolrab | |||
| It's all about the user... isn't it? | | BIB | 64 | |
| Jonathan Arnowitz; Elizabeth Dykstra-Erickson | |||
| In this issue | | BIB | 4 | |
| Jonathan Arnowitz; Elizabeth Dykstra-Erickson | |||
| Pay attention! | | BIB | 5-8 | |
| Jonathan Arnowitz; Elizabeth Dykstra-Erickson | |||
| Outsourceful | | BIB | 5 | |
| Tom Chi; Kevin Cheng | |||
| Letters to the editor | | BIB | 9 | |
| Jonathan Arnowitz; Elizabeth Dykstra-Erickson | |||
| What's the right thing? | | BIB | 9 | |
| Dr. Usability | |||
| Gadgets and the consequences of their design | | BIB | 10-11 | |
| Fred Sampson | |||
| Offshore usability: helping meet the global demand? | | BIB | 12-13 | |
| Eric Schaffer | |||
| Usability professionals: you've come a long way, baby! | | BIB | 14-17 | |
| Vikram Chauhan | |||
| Working with a global lab team in China | | BIB | 18-19 | |
| Tom Plocher | |||
| IBM research in China | | BIB | 20-21 | |
| Chen Zhao | |||
| A new destination for offshore usability: Russia? | | BIB | 22-24 | |
| Ivan Burmistrov | |||
| Working as a designer in a global team | | BIB | 25-27 | |
| Janaki Mythily Kumar | |||
| Communication across cultures | | BIB | 28 | |
| Roman Longoria | |||
| The moment of truth: how much does culture matter to you? | | BIB | 29-31 | |
| Lada Gorlenko | |||
| A decision table: offshore or not?: (when not to use offshore resources) | | BIB | 32-33 | |
| Eric Schaffer | |||
| The business of betas | | BIB | 35-36 | |
| Brian Frank | |||
| What is a game? | | BIB | 37-ff | |
| Dennis Wixon | |||
| Designing technology for the developing world | | BIB | 39-ff | |
| Gary Marsden | |||
| Trapped in a Lufthansa airline seat | | BIB | 41-ff | |
| Donald A. Norman | |||
| Visualizing the future of information visualization | | BIB | 42-43 | |
| Aaron Marcus | |||
| Inventing the future | | BIB | 44-ff | |
| Lars Erik Holmquist | |||
| The GUI shock: computer graphics and human-computer interaction | | BIBAK | Full-Text | 46-ff | |
| Jonathan Grudin | |||
| Someone recently wrote that SIGCHI was formed by computer scientists. This
was an understandable error, but in addition to erasing several years of
history, it glided over arguably the most wrenching transformation in
human-computer interaction (so far). The transition from interfaces based on
commands, forms, and full-page menus to graphical user interfaces based on
windows, icons, and the mouse created opportunities, presented challenges, and
wreaked havoc with some dominant HCI research programs of the early 1980s.
Another such disruption is entirely possible. Keywords: HCI History | |||
| Review of "Knowledge Management in Theory and Practice by Kimiz Dalkir", Elsevier Butterworth Heinemann, ISBN: 0-7506-7864-X, $49.95 | | BIB | 48-ff | |
| Karen Takle Quinn | |||
| New & upcoming titles | | BIB | 49 | |
| Gerard Torenvliet | |||
| Event planner | | BIB | 52-53 | |
| Volunteers for ACM/SIGCHI | | BIB | 56 | |
| Jonathan Arnowitz; Elizabeth Dykstra-Erickson | |||
| In this issue | | BIB | 4 | |
| Jonathan Arnowitz; Elizabeth Dykstra-Erickson | |||
| Do you believe?: our faith-based initiative | | BIB | 5-7 | |
| Jonathan Arnowitz; Elizabeth Dykstra-Erickson | |||
| Safe and secure | | BIB | 7 | |
| Tom Chi; Kevin Cheng | |||
| Postcards from the future | | BIB | 8 | |
| Atticus Wolrab | |||
| Lost in the localization forest | | BIB | 8 | |
| Dr. Usability | |||
| I give that web site an 11 | | BIB | 10-11 | |
| Fred Sampson | |||
| The science of segmentation | | BIB | 12-13 | |
| Brian Frank | |||
| HCI and cognitive disabilities | | BIB | 14-15 | |
| Clayton Lewis | |||
| Voices across the digital divide | | BIB | 16-17 | |
| Matt Jones | |||
| Introduction | | BIB | 18-19 | |
| Ryan West | |||
| IT security: protecting organizations in spite of themselves | | BIB | 20-27 | |
| David A. Siegel; Bill Reid; Susan M. Dray | |||
| Designing an evaluation method for security user interfaces: lessons from studying secure wireless network configuration | | BIB | 28-31 | |
| Cynthia Kuo; Adrian Perrig; Jesse Walker | |||
| To download or not to download: an examination of computer security decision making | | BIB | 32-37 | |
| Jefferson B. Hardee; Ryan West; Christopher B. Mayhorn | |||
| Minimal-feedback hints for remembering passwords | | BIB | 38-40 | |
| Morten Hertzum | |||
| Is usable security an oxymoron? | | BIB | 41-44 | |
| Alexander J. DeWitt; Jasna Kuljis | |||
| What do they "indicate?": evaluating security and privacy indicators | | BIB | 45-47 | |
| Lorrie Faith Cranor | |||
| Firefighters and engineers | | BIB | 48-49 | |
| Ka-Ping Yee | |||
| Feeling secure | | BIB | 50 | |
| Joel Grossman | |||
| Emotionally centered design | | BIB | 53-ff | |
| Donald A. Norman | |||
| CHI at the movies and on tv | | BIB | 54-ff | |
| Aaron Marcus | |||
| Welcome to the mobile life! | | BIB | 57-ff | |
| Lars Erik Holmquist | |||
| A missing generation: office automation/information systems and human-computer interaction | | BIBA | Full-Text | 58-61 | |
| Jonathan Grudin | |||
| Office Automation or Office Information Systems was a field of HCI research that flourished for a decade and then disappeared. It attracted leading researchers and established valuable new directions, but much of its record is scattered or absent online. This is a brief account of that activity. | |||
| Review of "The Handbook of Task Analysis for Human-Computer Interaction edited by Dan Diaper and Neville A. Stanton", Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, 2004 ISBN 0805844333 $50.00 | | BIB | 62-63 | |
| John G. Milanski | |||
| New & upcoming titles | | BIB | 63 | |
| Gerard Torenvliet | |||
| The elevator talk | | BIB | 65 | |
| Carolyn Gale | |||
| Discovering modalities for adaptive multimodal interfaces | | BIB | 66-70 | |
| Srihathai Prammanee; Klaus Moessner; Rahim Tafazolli | |||
| Event planner | | BIB | 68-69 | |
| The designer's hippocratic oath -- a reformulation | | BIB | 72 | |
| Jonathan Arnowitz; Elizabeth Dykstra-Erickson | |||
| In this issue | | BIB | 4 | |
| Jonathan Arnowitz; Elizabeth Dykstra-Erickson | |||
| Spoiled brats | | BIB | 5-6 | |
| Jonathan Arnowitz; Elizabeth Dykstra-Erickson | |||
| Gadget positioning system | | BIB | 7 | |
| Tom Chi; Kevin Cheng | |||
| The globalization malaise | | BIB | 7-8 | |
| Dr. Usability | |||
| Dear notebook: font memoirs | | BIB | 10-13 | |
| Joshua Larrabee | |||
| Driving devices: lessons learned in the business of designing mobile UIs | | BIB | 14-15 | |
| Brian Frank | |||
| Corporate UX -- : bringing value to the mobile industry | | BIB | 16-17 | |
| Tobias Herrman | |||
| What works? | | BIB | 18-19 | |
| Dennis Wixon | |||
| Digital libraries for the developing world | | BIB | 20-21 | |
| Ian H. Witten | |||
| Introduction | | BIB | 22-23 | |
| Bruno von Niman; Manfred Tscheligi | |||
| The music is the message | | BIB | 24-27 | |
| Matt Jones; Steve Jones | |||
| Mobile video recording in context | | BIB | 28-30 | |
| Erika Reponen; Pertti Huuskonen; Kristijan Mihalic | |||
| Mobile navigation support for pedestrians: can it work and does it pay off? | | BIB | 31-33 | |
| Manfred Tscheligi; Reinhard Sefelin | |||
| Multimodal warehouse application | | BIB | 34-37 | |
| Samir Raiyani; Janaki Mythily Kumar | |||
| Notes from China: handset design | | BIB | 38-39 | |
| Chris Ben | |||
| Point, push, pull: the FAU interface | | BIB | 40-41 | |
| Akio Yoshioka; Hiroyuki Toki; Noboru Takahashi; Shunji Ito | |||
| Your phone automatically caches your life | | BIB | 42-44 | |
| Youngho Rhee; Jaehwan Kim; Amy Chung | |||
| Leveraging the context of use in designing networked services | | BIB | 45-48 | |
| Boyd de Groot | |||
| Why doing user observations first is wrong | | BIB | 50-ff | |
| Don Norman | |||
| Tagging the world | | BIB | 51-ff | |
| Lars Erik Holmquist | |||
| Wit and wisdom: where do we turn for advice? | | BIB | 52-53 | |
| Aaron Marcus | |||
| Death of a sugar daddy: the mystery of the AFIPS orphans | | BIBA | Full-Text | 54-57 | |
| Jonathan Grudin | |||
| AFIPS, the formerly wealthy parent of ACM, IEEE, and smaller societies, had fallen on hard times. Born in 1961, it represented the United States in the International Federation for Information Processing (IFIP). Its other principal purpose was to manage the annual National Computer Conference (NCC). NCC and its predecessors had been major research conferences and also the world's largest computer trade show. For years, huge profits from exhibitor and registration fees had helped fund ACM and IEEE. By 1990, those years were over. | |||
| Review of "Mobile Interaction Design by Matt Jones and Gary Marsden", John Wiley & Sons, Ltd., ISBN 0470090898, $60.00 | | BIB | 58-ff | |
| Elizabeth Dykstra-Erickson | |||
| New & upcoming titles | | BIB | 59 | |
| Gerard Torenvliet | |||
| Event planner | | BIB | 60 | |
| Delight design | | BIB | 64 | |
| Jonathan Arnowitz; Elizabeth Dykstra-Erickson | |||
| Doomsday | | BIB | 64 | |
| Atticus Wolrab | |||
| In this issue | | BIB | 4 | |
| Jonathan Arnowitz; Elizabeth Dykstra-Erickson | |||
| It's all about the concept... | | BIB | 5 | |
| Jonathan Arnowitz; Elizabeth Dykstra-Erickson | |||
| Take a hike | | BIB | 7 | |
| Tom Chi; Kevin Cheng | |||
| Too smart and too rich? | | BIB | 7-9 | |
| Dr. Usability | |||
| Letters to the editor | | BIB | 9 | |
| Jonathan Arnowitz; Elizabeth Dykstra-Erickson | |||
| A Little Help From My Friends | | BIB | 10-11 | |
| Fred Sampson | |||
| Almost dead on arrival: a case study of non-user-centered design for a police emergency-response system | | BIB | 12-18 | |
| Aaron Marcus; Jim Gasperini | |||
| How to provide useful ICT when called upon | | BIB | 20-21 | |
| Edwin Blake | |||
| Talking about games experiences: a view from the trenches | | BIB | 22-23 | |
| Bruce Phillips | |||
| Gadgets are here to stay | | BIB | 24-25 | |
| Bruno von Niman | |||
| The reality of ICT use is failing to meet the user's requirements | | BIB | 26-29 | |
| Anne M. Clarke | |||
| Increasing text-entry usability in mobile devices for languages used in Europe | | BIB | 30-35 | |
| Martin Bocker; Bruno von Niman; Karl Ivar Larsson | |||
| Co-design, China, and the commercialization of the mobile user interface | | BIB | 36-41 | |
| David M. Williams | |||
| Mind the gap: notes on product replacement | | BIB | 42-46 | |
| Pekka Ketola | |||
| Words matter. talk about people: not customers, not consumers, not users | | BIB | 49-63 | |
| Donald A. Norman | |||
| Brainstorming pitfalls and best practices | | BIB | 50-63 | |
| Chauncey E. Wilson | |||
| From KidCHI to BabyCHI | | BIB | 52-53 | |
| Aaron Marcus | |||
| Turing maturing: the separation of artificial intelligence and human-computer interaction | | BIBA | Full-Text | 54-57 | |
| Jonathan Grudin | |||
| Why hasn't HCI been closer to AI, the most colorful and controversial branch of computer science? Both fields explore the nexus of computing and intelligent behavior. Both claim Allen Newell as a founding figure. SIGCHI and SIGART cosponsor the Intelligent User Interfaces (IUI) conferences. | |||
| Review of "The International Handbook of Creativity edited by James C. Kaufman and Robert J. Sternberg", Cambridge University Press, 2006, ISBN 0521547318, $34.99 | | BIB | 58-61 | |
| Mark C. Detweiler | |||
| New & upcoming titles | | BIB | 59 | |
| Gerard Torenvliet | |||
| Event planner | | BIB | 60-61 | |
| Phoning it in | | BIB | 64 | |
| Atticus Wolrab | |||
| Design At Chi | | BIB | 64 | |
| Jonathan Arnowitz; Elizabeth Dykstra-Erickson | |||
| In this issue | | BIB | 4 | |
| Jonathan Arnowitz; Elizabeth Dykstra-Erickson | |||
| Results are in: fidelity deception ranks high on usability problems | | BIB | 5-7 | |
| Jonathan Arnowitz; Elizabeth Dykstra-Erickson | |||
| Letters to the editor | | BIB | 7 | |
| Jonathan Arnowitz; Elizabeth Dykstra-Erickson | |||
| Judgmental | | BIB | 9 | |
| Tom Chi; Kevin Cheng | |||
| I like it like that! | | BIB | 9-10 | |
| Dr. Usability | |||
| Design infusion at CHI 2007 | | BIB | 11 | |
| Jon Kolko; Bill Lucas | |||
| Whither the web? | | BIB | 12-13 | |
| Fred Sampson | |||
| 10 usability tips & tricks for testing mobile applications | | BIB | 14-15 | |
| David Schultz | |||
| How do you manage your contacts if you can't read or write? | | BIB | 16-17 | |
| Jan Chipchase | |||
| Must electronic gadgets disrupt our face-to-face conversations? | | BIB | 18-19 | |
| William Newman | |||
| Quantifying usability | | BIB | 20-21 | |
| Jeff Sauro | |||
| The user is in the numbers | | BIB | 22-25 | |
| Jeff Sauro | |||
| Functionality, usability, and user experience: three areas of concern | | BIB | 26-28 | |
| Niamh McNamara; Jurek Kirakowski | |||
| Sample sizes for usability tests: mostly math, not magic | | BIB | 29-33 | |
| James R. Lewis | |||
| A practical guide to the CIF: usability measurements | | BIB | 34-37 | |
| Mary Theofanos | |||
| Making the fuzzy parts of ROI clear | | BIB | 38-41 | |
| John Sorflaten | |||
| Practical issues in usability measurement | | BIB | 42-43 | |
| Nigel Bevan | |||
| Logic versus usage: the case for activity-centered design | | BIB | 45-ff | |
| Donald A. Norman | |||
| Triangulation: the explicit use of multiple methods, measures, and approaches for determining core issues in product development | | BIB | 46-ff | |
| Chauncey E. Wilson | |||
| SeniorCHI: the geezers are coming! | | BIB | 48-49 | |
| Aaron Marcus | |||
| The demon in the basement | | BIBA | Full-Text | 50-53 | |
| Jonathan Grudin | |||
| What do seniors want and need from human-computer interaction and communication? What are the long-term effects on them with mobile/computing devices? How late in their lives can and should we expose them to the latest technology? | |||
| Ubiquitous Japan | | BIB | 54-55 | |
| Lars Erik Holmquist | |||
| Review of "The Semantic Turn: A New Foundation for Design by Klaus Krippendorff", Taylor & Francis, 2006, ISBN 0415322200, $79.95 | | BIB | 56-ff | |
| Austin Henderson | |||
| New & upcoming titles | | BIB | 57 | |
| Judy Grover | |||
| Event planner | | BIB | 58-59 | |
| Judy Grover | |||
| Transitioning to the hallway talk | | BIB | 60 | |
| Carolyn Gale | |||
| Toward a common ground: practice and research in HCI | | BIB | 61-62 | |
| Avi Parush | |||
| Thank you for your input: my favorite things | | BIB | 64 | |
| Jonathan Arnowitz | |||
| Skinner built the internet | | BIB | 64 | |
| Atticus Wolrab | |||