Tuesday, October 14, 2008

HCI Forum Topic DISS 720

I bought a flat screen TV this year. I still can not figure out how to record shows using the VCR or how to use the timer. The remote controls are very confusing. I get lost going through the menus.

Monday, October 13, 2008

HCI Forum Topic DISS 720

I bought a digital pedometer to measure how far I walk, but I can't figure out how to use it. The menu's and functions are just too complicated and confusing. I even read the instruction manual that came with it but I still can not figure it out. I wish I could return it but I lost the receipt and I've already had it for months.

Sunday, October 12, 2008

HCI Forum Topic DISS 720

Every time I log in to Blogger.com I click the box for remembering my password. However, I always have to type it in again when I log in the next time.

HCI Forum Topic DISS 720

Lately when I've typed messages in Yahoo from work (on lunch, of course), I've been part of the way though a sentence and the message is gone. I'll look in sent messages and will see that the partially drafted message has been sent 6 times. This has happened to me a couple of times now. I think it's the result of my hitting the TAB key in error, but I'm not sure.

HCI Forum Topic DISS 720

Although it has not happened for about 2 years, a strange phenomenon happens at work (it happened to me) whereby an employee opens up his/her computer only to find the about 2/3s of his/her documents and emails have been deleted. Although the IT people have been able to resurrect employees' lost files, the whole experience is time consuming and frustrating for all.

HCI Forum Topic DISS 720

The other day, a co-worker was completely locked-out of his computer at work. Despite urgent work that needed to be done, I heard him on the telephone all morning with the IT helpdesk, and saw him sitting in one of the conference chairs in his office working on documents on this lap as a contractor worked on his computer. I felt sorry for the guy.

HCI Forum Topic DISS 720

On 2 occasions I have forgotten the password to my work Blackberry. When this happens, you have 10 opportunities to change it. Apparently for security reasons, on the 10th failure, the Blackberry freezes and the user is locked out for good. The IT helpdesk was unable to help me. Instead, I was routed to a help desk that solely handles Blackberry issues and needed to be re-assigned the PDA as if I were a new employee. Both times this has happened the process has taken more than one day to complete.

HCI Forum Topic DISS 720

To follow-up on my previous entry re: having to change my specialized database password every 30 days by calling an outsourced IT helpdesk, I have had many misadventures speaking with helpdesk. On more than one occasion over the years (I go through this every month), I have spoken with an untrained employee who was either unable to change my password and needed to elevate the issue or screwed it up so that I was locked out of the system and also needed to elevate the issue.

HCI Forum Topis DISS 720

At work, different employees have access to different specialized databases. Each employee's password expires every 30 days. Rather than have the system set up so that each employee is notified that their password is about to expire and can automatically change it, the system simply denies the employee entry in the database and refers them to the IT helpdesk that is run by an outside contractor. I have heard that the contractor charges my employer $30 for each of these calls. In my opinion, this is highway robbery.

Saturday, October 11, 2008

HCI Forum Topis DISS 720

I have been playing the game Second Life for about a year now and I still have problems with some of the basics. For example, I find it extremely difficult to change my avatars appearance. I believe the functions for this could have been made much simpler.

HCI Forum Topis DISS 720

When I play the game Second Life it takes a long time for the graphics to load. I even bought a new graphics card and tons more memory for my computer, but it still does not help. It must be their server or something on their end.

HCI Forum Topis DISS 720

I use AT&T Yahoo as my internet provider. Every time I click on the Yahoo icon to log on the initial page never stops loading. I have to click the X to stop it, then I click on the icon for e-mail to view my mail. I have to do this every time I want to check my Yahoo e-mail.

HCI Forum Topis DISS 720

I am having problem with my work cell phone (blackberry). Other employees and I have noticed that there is often a delay from when the message was first sent to when it actually arrives. This delay can be as long as 24 hours.

HCI Forum Topis DISS 720

I feel that the interface for Facebook.com is not user friendly. For instance, I have installed many applications on Facebook.com, but if I want to use them I have to search for them, which can be difficult at times. Also, when I get a message from a friend on Facebook, I have it set up so I get an email notice in my yahoo.com mail box. But when I log on to Facebook.com I have to search all over for where that message came from in order to reply.

HCI Forum Topis DISS 720

I have a frustrating problem on blogger.com when I try to publish a post. Often I can not read the letters in the word verification section. It usually takes me more than one try to get it right.

Thursday, October 09, 2008

HCI Forum Topis DISS 720

I thought this could be helpful for the last assignment in this class. Below is a link for a usability toolkit. This web page lists forms, checklists and other helpful documents for conducting usability evaluations.

http://www.stcsig.org/usability/resources/toolkit/toolkit.html

Friday, October 03, 2008

HCI Forum topic DISS 720

The author Liz Tay writes about being afraid of losing track of basic human values such as identity and privacy in her paper "Protecting human values from Human-Computer Interaction". Technology vendors and institutions are now investing in a new area of research with the aim of protecting the vague lines that separate man and machine.

http://www.itnews.com.au/Feature/4411,protecting-human-values-from-humancomputer-interaction.aspx

Protecting human values from Human-Computer Interaction



By Liz Tay
24 April 2008 04:25PM
Tags: humancomputer | interaction | valuesensitive | design | researchers | philosophy

Protecting human values from Human-Computer Interaction



These days, it is nigh on impossible to stop the infiltration of technology into our lives. Business communications are conducted via phone or e-mail. Information is searched for and obtained online. Even our kitchens are getting smarter, with Internet-enabled fridges opening doors to food for both the body and mind.

It seems the technologically-driven world envisioned by so many science fiction authors is fast becoming a reality, but to what end? For fear of losing sight of basic human values such as identity and privacy, institutions and technology vendors now are investing in a new research area with an aim to protect the hazy margins that separate man from machine.

A recently-released research report from Microsoft and the University of Nottingham investigates how advances in interfaces may affect human society in the year 2020. Titled “Being human: human-computer interaction in the year 2020”, the report details the findings of a Human-Computer Interaction (HCI) conference that was hosted by Microsoft in March 2007.

Highlighting advances in display technologies, digital storage, connectivity and artificial intelligence, the report warns that without proper monitoring and assessment, humans may lose control of key decision-making processes, thus surrendering basic human values and concepts such as personal space, society, identity, independence, perception, intelligence and privacy.

And as machine learning technology develops, humans may become increasingly reliant on artificially intelligent computers to make decisions on our behalf.

“New computing technology is tremendously exciting, but the interaction between humans and computers is evolving into a complex ecosystem where small changes can have far-reaching consequences,” said Tom Rodden, Professor of Interactive Systems at the University of Nottingham who worked with Microsoft on the report.

“It is imperative that we combine technological innovations with an understanding of their impact on people,” Rodden said.

Rodden’s cautions resound with those of Noel Sharkey, a Professor of Artificial Intelligence and Robotics from the University of Sheffield who this week addressed the U.K. House of Commons on potential ethical pitfalls of near-future robots.

While robots may be beneficial to mankind in a range of applications including domestic cleaning and more effective, efficient surgery, Sharkey warned against the current lack of government guidelines in place in the U.K. for the rapidly increasing use of robots.

The increasing use of robots may also neglect human needs for companionship in areas such as healthcare where robot carers are designed to look after children and the elderly. While mechanical caregivers may yield economic benefits, they may also come with negative effects such as social exclusion.

“Much of this work is very useful in keeping old people out of care homes and hospitals for longer, but my worry is that economic consideration could see us all spending our last year socially excluded in the company of dumb machines,” Sharkey said.

Meanwhile, machines in Microsoft’s future-facing vision of 2020 will be far from dumb. While Human-Computer interactions of today are easily recognisable by the conventional keyboard, mouse and monitor set-up, futuristic devices may be controlled by bodily movements, such as two hands touching multiple, textured surfaces, and may be stored within our bodies.

A 2007 report on “The Hype Cycle for Human-Computer Interaction” by technology-focussed analyst firm Gartner similarly expects a radical shift towards a world of ambient intelligence after the year 2015.

Ambient intelligence will extend the human-computer interface past the desk and into office appliances and the walls around the user so non-trivial devices will be expected to contain some degree of embedded processing and communications capability.

Of course, the benefits of understanding the more subtle, pervasive nature of human interactions with future devices extend past the lofty goals of protecting human values, to the more mercenary aim of gaining a commercial advantage in the technology marketplace.

“Technology, and our relationship with it, is changing fast and encompassing every aspect of our existence,” said Richard Harper, Senior Researcher at Microsoft Research in Cambridge. “We need to comprehend and manage key aspects of this change if we are to ensure that technology adds to human experience, rather than detract from it.”

“At Microsoft we are interested in this topic because we want to develop technologies that improve people’s lives, and it is impossible to do so without thinking carefully about human values and how humans want to interact with technology,” he said.

Highlighting current research and development efforts at IBM that centre around translating consumer technologies to the corporate space, IBM researcher John Tang, described HCI as a means of developing technologies that have efficiently and effectively match human abilities.

“HCI is an important research topic because it is important to understand how our technologies will be usable or useful so that we can build products that will be successful in the commercial marketplace,” said Tang, a researcher in the USER group of IBM’s Almaden Research Center.

With a focus on what Tang called “understanding the why” of usage patterns to determine the context in which particular technologies are used, IBM’s HCI research group is conducting a mix of quantitative and qualitative studies in efforts to translate the popular consumer applications Facebook and del.icio.us to the corporate setting.

Cross-cultural collaboration has been another focus of IBM’s research team, Tang said, as certain social networking tools have been observed to be more readily adopted by some cultures and not others.

Noting a higher uptake of social networking in Western cultures when compared with the Eastern world, Tang explained that the technology has drawn attention to human values of friendship and the information that interpersonal connections may reveal to other people.

“There are subtle but important differences between things that are successful in the commercial space compared to that in the enterprise and business space,” he said. “They [researchers] really study how people are using these [social networking] tools to figure out underlying human needs that drive that use and how to translate that to an enterprise setting.”

Given the social nature of HCI research, IBM has broadened its focus and is bringing more academic disciplines into the research team, said Tang, who is a mechanical engineer and has also been trained in design and anthropology.

IBM currently employs a group of social scientists and anthropologists that are involved in researching how people are interacting with technology, especially in emerging tools such as Second Life and other virtual environments.

“I think in general, we have to include more of these kind of [social science] disciplines to get a holistic view of how people are using technology,” Tang said. “Involving those disciplines as part of our corporate collection of skills is one area that we’re moving towards.”

Tang agreed with Microsoft's 2020 research report, which urges the HCI community to educate young people about the impact of technological advancements, engage policy-makers in the implications of new computing ecosystems, and involve specialists from disciplines such as psychology, sociology and the arts in the development of HCI technologies.

While he noted that most companies currently are quite early in the process of adopting value-sensitive design strategies, Tang described numerous conversations between IBM and academics from the University of Maryland and University of Washington, where the concept of value-sensitive design is beginning to be expressed.

"We need to be better at predicting, anticipating and understanding how our technology interacts with human values", he said. "I think that's an area that HCI developers need to pay more attention to and make more investment in."

"It's an area where there aren't that many answers, but where more conscious-raising, awareness questions are being asked," he said.

HCI Forum topic DISS 720

I know this topic may be strange to some, but I believe subcultures like this are a large part of what goes on in Second Life. This paper by Shaowen Bardzell & Jeffrey Bardzellis (2007)is about the prevalence of bondage, discipline, and sadomasochism (BDSM) in Second Life.

http://www.bcs.org/upload/pdf/ewic_hc07_lppaper1.pdf

ABSTRACT

Second Life, a participant-created multi-user virtual environment (MUVE), gained sudden media acclaim in 2006. Prior to that, the world was developing many of the characteristics that have come into their own today, such as virtual fashion lines, a thriving virtual economy, scripted interactive furniture, vehicles, and toys. Perhaps not surprisingly, much of the early content was adult in nature, from cyberstrip clubs to kinky lingerie, sex animations, and interactive virtual genitalia.

More surprising was the visibility and prevalence of the BDSM (bondage, discipline, and sadomasochism) subculture. In this paper, we report results from a two-year study of the BDSM subculture in Second Life, combining virtual ethnography and artifact analysis with recent HCI theories of experience design to understand how and why this complex phenomenon emerged from Second Life users.

We contend that the participant-created world enables the construction of powerful aesthetic experiences, and that these experiences are made possible by the interweaving of visual, literary, and interaction aesthetics.