This is the website for the Spring 2013 Mobile and Ubiquitous Computing course. This course is cross-listed for Computer Science grad students as CS 7470 and undergrads as CS 4605, and for Industrial Design grad students as ID 8900 and undergrads as ID 4823. Lectures are held 9:35PM - 10:55PM Tuesday and Thursday in College of Computing Room 17. Some supplementary lessons on prototyping equipment will be held in the Prototyping Lab in the basement of the Tech Square Research Building (TSRB).
Dr. Thad Starner (thad AT gatech.edu)
Office: Tech Square Research Building, Second Floor, Room 239
Office Hours: by email appointment
Dr. Gregory D. Abowd (abowd AT gatech.edu)
Office: Tech Square Research Building, Third Floor, Room 329 or Health Systems Institute, 2nd Floor, Room 220H
Office Hours: by email appointment
Clint Zeagler (clintzeagler AT gatech.edu)
Office Hours: by email appointment
Caleb Southern (caleb.southern AT gatech.edu)
Office: Tech Square Research Building, Third Floor, Room 329 Student Area
Office Hours: by email appointment
Krumm, J. (2009). Ubiquitous Computing (1st ed.). Chapman & Hall/CRC.
http://www.amazon.com/Ubiquitous-Computing-Fundamentals-John-Krumm/dp/1420093606
Everyone in the class will be expected to read the required readings. All the readings and when they are due will be posted on the Calendar
Students are also required to sign up for at least two additional readings, lead a class discussion on them, and submit a brief written summary of the reading. The additional readings and their due dates will be posted on the Calendar. You can sign up for the additional readings on T-Square (coming soon). Please do not wait until the end of the semester to pick your additional readings.
The readings and discussion are essential to your Class Participation grade.
Dates, readings, additional readings and assignments are all posted on the Calendar . Please visit this page often as it will be updated regularly.
There will be two group projects during the semester. The second project can be a continuation of the first, or a completely new project. We expect projects to be original research. You can build on previous ideas, but it is not appropriate to replicate previous work.
You are responsible for forming teams composed of four students. There can be at most one Industrial Design student on each team.
We will have guests presenting project ideas on Tue 1/15 and Thu 1/17 in class. You can read about some projects from previous years below. You are also welcome to come up with your own project idea, provided you can form a team around it.
Projects from Previous Years
2011: http://gtubicomp.pbworks.com/w/browse/#view=ViewFolder¶m=Project
2009: https://wiki.cc.gatech.edu/ccg/classes/muc/fall09
Project Proposal Guidelines
Please include the following in your Project Proposal. Bring two paper copies to class, and one member of the group must also submit electronically on T-Square.
(The proposal should be 1-2 pages.)
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Title
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Group Members and their Roles
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Description of what your group plans to do for the project and your approach
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Motivation: why the work matters
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Description of previous research in the area
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Resources you may need (in terms of hardware, software, etc)
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Timeline
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Grading Criteria - What are the goals or deliverables of this project that you think we should grade you by
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References - this class is not about recreating existing work.
Project 1 Deliverables
Paper
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Bring two hard copies to class, and one team member must also submit electronically on T-Square.
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Please submit as a PDF.
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The writeup will be
3 pages. It should follow the UIST (ACM Symposium on User Interface Software and Technology) format. Links to the Latex and Word templates for this format can be found
here. (Use the SIGCHI Papers Word Template or LaTex Template.)
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You may submit appendices which include design documents or other diagrams such as circuit layouts. These will not count towards your three pages.
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The sections we would like to see in your writeup are:
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Introduction - What you're doing, why it's important
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Previous/Related work - What's already been done and why are you different
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Your Work
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Discussion - What have you learned
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Future Work - What remains to be done for your project
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Conclusions - Take home points/Recap
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References
Video
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Upload your video to a publicly viewable file sharing site (youtube, etc.) You can submit the link to the video on T-Square.
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The video should be roughly 3-5 minutes.
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Show, don't tell
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These videos should be more about telling a story than just a rundown of technology. Demonstrate your work in action.
Poster
Industrial Design students may refer to the ID syllabus and check with Clint Zeagler for specific requirements.
Computer Science Sections
Industrial Design
ID 4823: Undergraduate Section
- Class Participation - 10%
- Project 1 - 40%
- Proposal - 5%
- Project work - 15%
- Paper - 10%
- Video / Poster - 5%
- Project 2 - 50%
- Proposal - 5%
- Project work - 10%
- Paper - 10%
- Video / Poster - 5%
- Presentation - 5%
ID 8900: Graduate Section
- Class Participation - 5%
- Project 1 - 35%
- Proposal - 5%
- Project work - 10%
- Paper - 10%
- Video / Poster- 5%
- Project 2 - 50%
- Proposal - 5%
- Project work - 10%
- Paper - 10%
- Video / Poster - 5%
- Presentation - 5%
- Exam 10%
Prototyping Lab
You must attend an orientation session before you can get buzzcard access to the lab and use the equipment.
See orientation and training sessions on the lab calendar:
https://www.google.com/calendar/embed?src=bmdnqsqr6e3sc79nu50ejd8tjc%40group.calendar.google.com&ctz=America/New_York
More information:
http://gvu.gatech.edu/wiki/index.php/Prototyping_Lab
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