Kevin Makice
Impoverished Ph.D. student
Website: http://www.blogschmog.net/
Sunday, February 3rd, 2008
Putting People First recently suggested it, and coincidentally it just came true: Interactions is now available online. At least, the January-February issue is, at the moment.
According to Scott Delman, ACM Group Publisher:
ACM is pleased to announce a new innovation for subscribers to interactions, the leading magazine publication for the Human Computer Interactions community. As from the January-February 2008 issue, ACM will be offering a digital edition of each issue of the magazine as an added benefit to subscribers. This new offering is provided in addition to the current print edition of the magazine and articles posted in the ACM Digital Library. The magazine’s new digital edition will serve as an additional service that will enable members to view a true digital representation of the entire print magazine from cover to cover in an easy to use digital format.
The “added benefit to subscribers” part may be an indication that ACM plans or at least reserves the right to pull the online version under the account firewall. For the time being, the images and navigation are a nice way to read the content assembled by editors Richard Anderson and Jon Kolko.
I was particularly interested in Steve Portigal’s rant on personas, a continual point of debate in HCI. A very diverse range of global perspectives, including a rather insightful Gary Marsden.
Posted in Bloomington, IN, USA
Tags: ACM | Interactions Magazine | online reading | subscriptions
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Sunday, January 20th, 2008
Startup Weekend is proud to announce that the Bloomington Startup Weekend will be held February 8-10 2008. This will be the 15th Startup Weekend to take place across the globe since the idea originated last July.
Startup Weekend recruits a few dozen highly motivated people to build a community and company in a weekend. Tickets for Bloomington Startup Weekend will be sold for $20 online. Some scholarship opportunities and childcare may be available, as well.
There are 7 main areas of expertise that participants can sign up for:
- Design
- Developer
- PR/ Marketing
- Business Development
- User Experience
- Legal
- Project Management
Other skill sets are welcome. The most important attribute is a willingness to contribute all three days of the weekend. Make sure to get tickets early, it will most likely sell out fast. For more information, visit our local event blog and pre-event Ning community.
This is a community event organized by local students and technology professionals. Participants from past weekends have raved about the quality of professional friendships made and the opportunity to evaluate people in the context of project work.
Posted in Bloomington, IN, USA
Tags: announcement | Bloomington | Event type | February | Startup Weekend
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Friday, November 16th, 2007
Bloomington, Indiana is a unique mix of small-town community and big-city perks. The city of Bloomington is surprisingly tech-savvy, sporting an extensive local wiki and a growing awareness of its own technical expertise. At the Indiana University School of Informatics, our human-computer interaction program has a decidedly design focus and an active academic community, both online and off. Currently, projects—like the Design Studies Initiative and organizing a local Startup Weekend—are underway to connect our local human resources.
I am pleased to introduce you to several local bloggers of potential interest to the UX community. Current students and faculty in the HCI program at the School of Informatics include:
- Marty Siegel, faculty
- Erik Stolterman, faculty
- Christian Briggs, Ph.D. student
- Heekyoung Jung, Ph.D. student
- Justin Donaldson, Ph.D. student
- Kevin Makice, Ph.D. student
- Marty McCrory, Ph.D. student
- Richie Hazlewood, Ph.D. student
- Will Ryan, Ph.D. student
- Aaron Houssian
- Amber Kim
- Ankit Khare
- Balakrishna Chennupati
- David Roedl
- Jamie McAtee
- Jason de Runa
- Kenton Hankins
- Kshitiz Anand
- Mike Madison
- Mingxian Chang
- Shruti Bhandari
- Tyler Pace
- Vignesh Ramesh
- HCI/d Course Blogs: Orange, Blue, Purple, Red, and Green
- Virtual Worlds for Serious Use
- HCI Design Evaluation Methods
- Interaction Culture
Other local technology blogs include:
- First: Principles and Bloomington Geek Dinners (Ben Fulton)
- geek-guides (Elijah Wright)
- Storygeek (Mark Bell)
- UberNoggin and Second Life Education Research (Sarah Robbins)
Posted in Bloomington, IN, USA
Tags: blog roll | Bloomington | design | human-computer interaction | Indiana | Indiana University | LocaleWelcome | School of Informatics
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