Some workers accepted the
risk of not having certain information conveniently accessible
in all situations. By dedicating
certain documents exclusively
to certain devices, they could
avoid synchronization work.
Interestingly, these strategies
of distributing data between
devices go hand-in-hand with
physical demands and impediments, and vice versa. A superior strategy in carrying one’s
mobile devices may be poor as
it requires excess synchronization. We reported on the users’
“mobile kits,” i.e., keeping the
repertoire of things carried
fixed [ 2]. While having a more
or less static kit reduces cognitive effort, it does so with the
cost of manual labor, time, and
physical effort stemming from
the burden of packing, maintaining, and carrying the kit.
Weiser warned against “
making everything the same,” to
which aiming for seamlessness
would lead. Instead, we should
design “beautiful seams” and
seams that can be appropriated
[ 6]. The present-day ubicomp,
unfortunately, is not there yet.
The seams are not visible and
certainly not beautiful. The
disconnected and fragmented
technological resources must
be known in advance, planned
and prepared for. The nature
of seams is not only a problem
of the digital but they are also
inherently linked to the way
we structure our action and
share efforts to tasks of physical
nature, such as carrying devices.
ence, and invisibility as design
drivers. The user should be able
to peacefully concentrate on the
task at hand and not disrupt
others.
On the positive side, the
workers were indeed able to use
devices nondisruptively; or, at
least, they did not problematize
it. On the negative side, it was
not because of devices’ clever
design but because of new habits they acquired. Some learned
how to set up their devices only
one small step at a time in the
beginning of meetings so that
they could appear to be concentrating on the meeting, not on
the laptop. To streamline the
transition of computing state
from one meeting to another,
one worker had adopted the
habit of closing the laptop lid
but leaving the computer running and piling all auxiliaries on the top surface. Some
workers thought that others
perceive working on a bigger
laptop while in a meeting as less
disrupting than working on a
smaller-screen smartphone that
demands less attention.
Similarly to context-aware-ness and seamlessness, making
choices that determine disrup-tiveness is a task left to the
users.
digitally; 3) propagating metadata on migration of data from
device to device; 4) supporting ad hoc uses of proximate
devices’ resources like projectors, keyboards, and displays;
5) triggering digital events like
synchronization of predetermined documents with physical gestures; and 6) supporting appropriation of material
properties for support surfaces.
Users essentially need new and
more efficient ways to interop-erate devices, plan action in the
face of “seams,” understand and
manage technological complexity, plug their data into other
devices, and align use fluently
with everyday activities.
The drifting apart of HCI
research and real-world ubicomp is worrisome because
improving the state of affairs
is not the duty of engineers
alone. Ethnographers and user
researchers can contribute to
the efforts in improving ubicomp
by studying practices that construct and keep it together [ 7].
[ 6] Chalmers, M., and
Galani, A. Seamful interweaving: Heterogeneity
in the theory and design
of interactive systems.
In Proc. DIS’04, ACM
Press (2004): 243-252.
[ 7] Star, S.L. The
ethnography of infrastructure. American
Behavioral Scientist 43,
3 (1999).
Toward Fluent
Multidevice Work
Imagination is open for ideas
on design. In the paper we
presented what was basically
a laundry list of approaches to
improving ubicomp infrastructures: 1) minimizing overheads
that create temporal seams
between activities; 2) making
remote but important resources,
such as connectivity or cables,
better transparent locally and
Acknowledgements
I thank Lauri Sumari, Martti
Mäntylä, Sakari Tamminen,
Risto Sarvas, and Miikka
Miettinen for sharing their
thoughts. The Academy of
Finland projects ContextCues
and Amoveo have supported
this work.
Doing Nondisruptiveness
The final point concerns nondisruptiveness. Followers of
Weiser’s vision have referred to
concepts like calmness, ambi-
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Antti Oulasvirta is a postdoctoral scholar at the
School of Information,
University of California at
Berkeley, and a research
scientist at the Helsinki Institute for
Information Technology HIIT, Finland.
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March + April 2008