“Try to run on the google street view like a jogging game of wii fit from katsuma on Vimeo.”
Discovered via Google Maps Mania
“Try to run on the google street view like a jogging game of wii fit from katsuma on Vimeo.”
Discovered via Google Maps Mania
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Tags: Augmented Reality, fun, Google |
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| Posted: 9/30/08 12:46 pm UTC by djp3 Add Your Comment | |
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The Informatics faculty have been spending a lot of time assessing our program and setting a course for the future of our academic program. While we work through the final bits of that we want to make sure we are communicating what our current expectations are.
To that end I’d like to draw our current grad students’ attention to a working version of grad program guidelines for the UBICOMP and General tracks of the ICS PhD which we have posted online here.
If something seems wrong about those guidelines to you, please talk to your adviser and then have them contact Prof. Patterson with any corrections or clarifications. When the complete guidelines are finished we will link to that document (which will include info on the Software Engineering track and ICTS track, for example)
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Tags: education, LUCI |
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| Posted: 9/17/08 11:58 am UTC by djp3 Make the First Comment | |
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From the tomorrow’s professor mailing list
Ten Ways of Thinking that Lead to Writing Procrastination -and Rebuttals to Those Thoughts
I need to warm up first by writing some email.
* Rebuttal: You can warm up by starting the work slowly, making a list of what you will do, reading over your notes or writing from yesterday.
I’m not in a good mood and I don’t write well when I’m not in a good mood – I’ll do it later when I feel better.
* Rebuttal: Nothing will make you feel as good as getting something done. The main reason for your bad mood is that you don’t really want to do this task, so getting it out of the way will feel great.
Life is so hard – I can’t believe I have to do this unpleasant task. I’ll even it out by doing something more fun first.
* Rebuttal: Yes, life is hard, and it’s terrible that you have to do this task. That’s why you will reward yourself after you do the task. Otherwise you’re applying backwards conditioning, which doesn’t work. And don’t forget to plan enough fun and relaxation time into your schedule.
I’ll definitely do it, in a minute or so
* Rebuttal: Set a timer, or that minute could last 2 hours. When the timer goes off, do the task. Even better, do it now!
After this bad thing is over in my life (midterms, meeting, in-law visit, etc.) my life will seem easier and I’ll be able to do my task on a daily basis. So I’ll wait until then.
* Rebuttal: Life is always like this. You can afford to do 15 minutes of work today, can’t you? This is the one small act you can do to make your life a little better.
I just don’t feel like it
* Rebuttal: So what? Do it anyway! If you wait until you feel like it, the task will get done in 10 years if you’re lucky. They only way to make yourself feel like it is to get started and get into the flow of the work.
Why do just a little today – I’ll do double tomorrow – I work better when I feel pressure anyway.
* Rebuttal: It’s a fallacy that you work better under pressure. It’s not true, because anxiety reduces creativity and clear thinking. And doing double the next day will backfire. You will feel less like doing it tomorrow because you’ve decided you must do double the work, and it will seem more overwhelming and less appealing, so you’re even more likely to put it off until the next day.
I can only work in one place (the library, a café, my office) and that place isn’t available or I can’t get there – so there’s no point in working at all.
* Rebuttal: You’d be surprised how much work you can get done no matter where you are. Even if you don’t have your laptop with you, you can pull out a scrap of paper and write down a few notes on what you’d like to accomplish in the section you’ve been working on. Try it!
I’m not sure how to do this – I don’t know how sitting down and writing will enable me to do it — it’s just hopeless so why even start?
* Rebuttal: If you’re not clear enough on what to do, writing may be the only way to get you out of this state. If you truly need help from someone else on this problem, you need to write down the questions clearly. The process of writing them down may clarify the issue for you.
I didn’t write well yesterday, so today will be terrible.
* Rebuttal: Often bad writing days are followed by better ones. The reason to write daily is that your brain is still plugging away on it while you’re doing other things or sleeping. So you may surprise yourself today!
Too which I would add:
I’ll just blog something first.
* Stop blogging
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Tags: advice, article, education |
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| Posted: 9/16/08 11:54 am UTC by djp3 Make the First Comment | |
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“DEMOfall 08, San Diego and Mountain View, CA, – September 8, 2008 – The nascent electronic reader industry is poised for explosive growth beginning in 2009. But current products in the category focus on leisure reading and ignore a large and untapped market: business users. Today, before industry influencers at the DEMOfall 08 technology conference, Plastic Logic previewed a gamechanging new device that brings a panoply of business information to your fingertips with powerful tools to make people more productive and simplify their work lives. ”
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Tags: article, demo, Gadget |
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| Posted: 9/8/08 5:02 pm UTC by djp3 Make the First Comment | |
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Interesting blog entry from Ed Felten at Princeton on why people will sell their privacy for a miniscule chance to win {a hawaiian vacation, ipod, mercedes}.
“Viewed this way, the price I charge you tells you at least as much about how well I think my privacy is protected, as it does about how badly I want to keep my location private. So the answer to “what could they be thinking” is “they could be thinking they have no privacy in the first place”.”
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Tags: article, Ed Felten, privacy |
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| Posted: 9/5/08 12:17 pm UTC by djp3 Make the First Comment | |
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Pervasive 2009, the Seventh International Conference on Pervasive
Computing, May 11-14, 2009 in Nara, Japan.
http://pervasive2009.org/
Papers and notes due October 17, 2008, 5pm (PST)
This annual conference provides a premier forum for researchers to
present their latest results in all areas related to architecture,
design, implementation, application and evaluation of pervasive
computing as it integrates into our lives.
Pervasive 2009 will include a highly selective single-track program for
technical papers describing original and unpublished research advancing
the state of the art in mobile and pervasive computing, including but
not limited to the following topics:
* Technologies and devices for pervasive computing
* Software aspects including middleware and operating systems for
pervasive computing
* Tools, infrastructures, architectures and techniques for
designing, implementing & deploying pervasive computing systems
* Applications of pervasive computing technologies
* Interfaces and modes of interactions between people and pervasive
computing devices, applications or environments
* Evaluations and evaluation methods, for assessing the impact of
pervasive computing devices, applications or environments
* Privacy, security, trust & social issues and implications of
pervasive computing
The conference will be accepting both full (18 page LNCS) and more
succinct shorter ‘Notes’ (up to 8 LNCS page papers). All papers will be
selected on their individual merit based on a peer review by the TPC and
external expert reviewers. Accepted papers must be presented at the
conference. See author guidelines for more information:
http://pervasive2009.org/submission.shtml
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Tags: conference, japan, pervasive computing |
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| Posted: 9/3/08 8:59 am UTC by djp3 Make the First Comment | |
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