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Toward Adaptive Services for Personal Archiving

By Scott Klemmer - Stanford
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  • Fall 2007
  • Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 3.0
  • Stanford

Lecture Description

November 2, 2007 lecture by Cathy Marshall for the Stanford University Human-Computer Interaction Seminar. Most of us engage in magical thinking when it comes to the long term fate of our digital stuff. At this point, a strategy that hinges on benign neglect and lots of copies seems to be the best we can hope for. Cathy discusses four central themes of personal digital archiving and some additional challenges introduced by home computing environments. She also talks about how these themes relate to emerging institutional archiving technologies, best practices, and information policies.

Course Description

Course Index

  1. Designing Interactions that Combine Pen, Paper, and PC
  2. Accountability of Presence: Location Tracking Beyond Privacy
  3. Augmented Social Cognition
  4. Designing a Health Care Interface
  5. Toward Adaptive Services for Personal Archiving
  6. Data Modeling and Conceptual Sketching in the Design Process
  7. ChucK: A Computer Music Programming Language
  8. Context Aware Computing: Understanding Human Intention
  9. Adaptive Interaction Techniques for Sharing Design Resources
  10. Technologies for Collaborative Democracy
  11. Designing for Cuba: Necessary In(ter)vention
  12. The Past, Present, and Future of Digital Memories
  13. The Democratization of Ubiquitous Computing
  14. Automatically Generating Personalized Adaptive User Interfaces
  15. MySong: Automatic Accompaniment for Vocal Melodies
  16. Automating & Customizing the Web With Keyword Programming
  17. Science 2.0: The Design Science of Collaboration
  18. Tangible Media for Design and Inspiration
  19. Pario: the Next Step Beyond Audio and Video
  20. Sculpting Behavior: Developing a Language for Hands-on Learning
  21. Tap is the New Click
  22. Social Annotation, Contextual Collaboration, Online Transparency
  23. Enlightened Trial and Error: Gaining Insight Through New Tools
  24. Computer Graphics as a Telecommunicati on Medium
  25. Not Invented Here: Online Mapping Unraveled