Posts Tagged ‘Bill Maurer’

Mobile ICTs as Ordinary Technologies: Stories and Experiences - January 18th, 2013

The dilemma of the smartphone

Congratulations to Informatics grad student, Ellie Harmon on passing her advancement to candidacy, with her work entitled, “Mobile ICTs as Ordinary Technologies: Stories and Experiences”.

“Though smartphones are increasingly commonplace and seemingly ordinary objects for many Americans, concerns about their recent and rapid proliferation abound. Far from the promises of UbiComp visionaries, even as smartphones become pervasive, they fail to fade away as invisible or unremarkable technologies. Instead, as noted by Paul Dourish & Gennevieve Bell, the ubiquitous computing of the present is “messy” and “contested” [Dourish & Bell 2011]. Mimi Ito and Daisuke Okabe have pointed to the emergence of new “technosocial situations” alongside the integration of mobile phones into social life, noting that new practices are simultaneously celebrated and criticized [Ito & Okabe 2005]. Heather Horst and Daniel Miller call out the “rapid” spread of cell phones, as well as the “dynamic” nature of the phenomenon as it shifts and evolves over the course of mere “days and months” [Horscht & Miller 2007].

It is this instability, and the unsettled nature of the smartphone experience that I explore in my research. I take a practice-based approach, asking how this device is used, integrated, and negotiated within the context of ordinary life. In this talk I will first present an analysis of the stories about the smartphone that circulate in popular media. I highlight two common tropes: one calling for increased technological integration, the other urging individuals to dis-integrate the smartphone from daily life. I examine the idealized subject positions of these two tropes and show how both simplistic stories call on the same overarching values to compel opposing individual actions. I then reflect on the conflicts experienced by individuals when they try to align and account for their own actions in relation to these multiple contradictory narratives. In the second half of the talk I present a more open-ended discussion of my ongoing and future fieldwork with families in southern California and hikers on the Pacific Crest Trail. Building from the stories identified in the media analysis, my fieldwork examines the shifting experiences of subjectivity, self & society, and time & place in the context of individual engagements with personal mobile ICTs.”

Committee: Melissa Mazmanian (chair), Kavita Philip, Paul Dourish, Bill Maurer, Geof Bowker

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Posted: 1/18/13 8:07 pm UTC by Make the First Comment
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Gold to Gigabytes - October 6th, 2012

Exhibit Brochure

bitcoin token being printed

bitcoin token on display

barbie is our neighbor

Department of Anthropology faculty, Bill Maurer, director of the Institute for Money, Technology and Financial Inclusion, with a team of curators, has put together a very interesting exhibit called “Gold to Gigabytes: The Past, Present, and Future of Money” It’s a sibling exhibit to one that is on display in The British Museum. Our’s is on display at the UCI Langson Library just after you walk in.

The opening of the exhibit is going on now. It is a really incredible score for our library and UCI! The LUCI lab participated in this exhibit in two ways: We provided a physical bitcoin model which you can see in the case. This wouldn’t have been possible without Prof. Hayes‘ foresight in purchasing a 3D printer and Ph.D. Student Sen Hirano’s expertise in making it work. We also provided a video loop of the first sequence of transactions in the bitcoin network graphically displayed.

Swing by the library and take a look!



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Posted: 10/6/12 1:08 am UTC by Make the First Comment
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LA Times reports on Intel grant - July 2nd, 2012

LA Times Logo

Hot on the heels of the public announcement of the Intel Science and Technology Center for Social Computing is this article in the LA Times. There’s not much new information in it, but its an important venue!

“UC Irvine is the research hub, with four other campuses participating. The university will receive $5 million over five years, with an additional $7.5 million being split among the other universities.

Experts from those schools, which include Cornell University, Indiana University, the Georgia Institute of Technology and New York University, specialize in anthropology, media studies, digital humanities, philosophy and computer science, among other disciplines.

Each year, the research center will explore a new defining theme, the first being restoring “materiality” to information. Researchers will explore the “connection of information to the physical world,” Dourish said.

Intel researchers will work with dozens of faculty members and graduate and doctoral students in the campus labs. The research will not be owned by Intel but will instead be public, open intellectual property, the university said.” [citation]

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Posted: 7/2/12 4:17 pm UTC by Make the First Comment
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UCI to lead national social computing research center - June 27th, 2012

Intel Science and Technology Center for Social Computing Facebook Logo

If you were under a rock yesterday and missed this tremendous announcement, I report it here for your perusal. Paul Dourish, original founder of the LUCI lab, has coordinated a multi-million dollar donation from Intel to UCI. This was in coordination with many other folks at UCI and represents a major step forward for the LUCI lab, the Informatics department, the Bren School, UCI, etc…

“UC Irvine will anchor a new $12.5 million, Intel-funded research center that applies social science and humanities to the design and analysis of digital information.

“Technology is profoundly entangled with our everyday lives. As researchers, we can’t get a handle on what’s going on by looking at technical factors alone. We have to study them in concert with human, social and cultural aspects,” said UCI informatics professor Paul Dourish.

He and Scott Mainwaring of Intel Labs will co-lead the center, dubbed the Intel Science & Technology Center for Social Computing, along with UCI anthropology and law professor Bill Maurer.

[cite: UCI Press Release]

Paul also adds some credit where credit is due in his Facebook post:

“Exhausted and exhilarated after a busy day in San Francisco announcing our new Intel Science and Technology Center for Social Computing to the world. This is a great collaboration with Scott Mainwaring, Bill Maurer, Phoebe Sengers, Tarleton Gillespie, Steve Jackson, Tom Boellstorff, Kavita Philip, Geof Bowker, Gillian Hayes, Melissa Mazmanian, Jeffrey Bardzell, Shaowen Bardzell, Erik Stolterman, Carl Disalvo, Chris Ledantec, Ian Bogost, Erica Robles, Helen Nissenbaum, and more. Very excited about our next steps!”

You can connect to the Center on Facebook here: http://www.facebook.com/istcsocial

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Posted: 6/27/12 5:10 pm UTC by Make the First Comment
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T-Mobile Product Roadmap Roadshow - April 28th, 2011

T-Mobile came by the LUCI lab and Donald Bren Hall and gave a product roadmap presentation for the campus today.
We started with some research presentations:

  1. André van der Hoek talked about using tablets in the classroom and meeting room for creative/design work
  2. Chen Li talked about intelligent mobile search
  3. Steve Voida talked about studying multi-tasking office work instrumented with sensors to understand how work is done throughout the week
  4. Alfred Kobdsa talked about studies of usability of personal navigation devices
  5. Karen Cheng talked about mobile technology for health with high vulnerability low resource populations.
  6. Bill Maurer talked about mobile finance in the developing world

Then T-Mobile, via Kimberly Back, gave us a glimpse of what T-Mobile is up to and what is coming down their product pipeline:

  1. They are currently owned by Deutsche Telekom
  2. Currently T-Mobile has deployed HSPA+ (“21Mbps theoretical” 4G) which is 6-8 Mbps down, 2Mbps up.  Covers 200 million people.
  3. In June SoCal is getting upgraded to HSPA+ (“42Mbps theoretical” 4G) 10-12 Mbps download (on the street, not theoretical), 2Mbps upload.
  4. Those are just speeds from phone to the tower however…
  5. Traditionally telecoms use T1 connections (x6) from tower out…
  6. 90% of T-Mobiles have direct Ethernet out now.  T-Mobile is 12-18 months ahead of AT&T. This is why AT&T wants to buy them.  This is the source of the iPhone speed troubles everything after the tower…
  7. T-Mobile has Wi-Fi based calling for voice (not just data) using standard protocols.  It creates a secure tunnel to T-Mobile data center over Wi-Fi where it is connected to normal phone network.  This works internationally free of charge.
  8. U.S. Market share in 2010: 26% Android, 28% Apple, 25% RIM, 20% other. Android is growing much faster in new purchases, however.
  9. Nokia Astound is coming out with “one of the bigger banks in America” with Near-Field Communications later in the year
  10. 3 new Blackberries coming out, one with Near-Field communications in July.
  11. New 4G Mobile Hotspot came out last week that connects to the HSPA+ 21 network.
  12. Samsung Galaxy was the first tablet device that came out from T-Mobile with Android, but runs Android 2.2 and is falling behind.
  13. Dell Streak is also an existing device running Android 2.2 and is upgradeable to Android Honeycomb because it has a dual-core processor.
  14. A nice slide on tablet comparisons that they are going to forward to us.
  15. They have a tablet that records in 3-D !.  Not even sure what to make of that.
  16. If T-Mobile doesn’t carry it and it takes a SIM card, they can get it through Business Partner Sales.
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Posted: 4/28/11 8:05 pm UTC by Make the First Comment
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Nithya Sambasivan Advances to Candidacy - March 3rd, 2010

Beneficiary User

Beneficiary User

Congratulations to Informatics Ph.D. Student Nithya Sambasivan for passing her advancement to candidacy exam!

Committee: Bonnie Nardi (chair), Ed Cutrell (Microsoft), Bill Maurer, Donald Patterson, Alladi Venkatesh

Intermediated Technology Use in Developing Communities

Abstract: We describe a prevalent mode of information access in low-income communities of the developing world intermediated interactions. They enable persons for whom technology is inaccessible due to non-literacy, lack of technology-operation skills, financial constraints and so on, to benefit from technologies through digitally skilled users thus, expanding the reach of technologies. Reporting the results of our ethnography in two urban slums of Bangalore, India, we present three distinct intermediated interactions: inputting intent into the device in proximate enabling, interpretation of device output in proximate translation, and both input of intent and interpretation of output in surrogate usage. We present some requirements and challenges in interface design of these interactions and explain how they are different from direct interactions. We then explain the broader effects of these interactions on low-income communities, and present some implications for design.

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Posted: 3/3/10 10:34 am UTC by Make the First Comment
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