Publication statistics
Pub. period:2002-2010
Pub. count:9
Number of co-authors:11
Co-authors
Number of publications with 3 favourite co-authors:
Scott Carter:4Elizabeth F. Churchill:4Les Nelson:4 Productive colleagues
Laurent Denoue's 3 most productive colleagues in number of publications:
Elizabeth F. Churc..:59Andreas Girgensohn:46Gene Golovchinsky:39 
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Laurent Denoue
Publications by Laurent Denoue (bibliography)
Carter, Scott, Liao, Chunyuan, Denoue, Laurent, Golovchinsky, Gene and Liu, Qiong (2010): Linking Digital Media to Physical Documents: Comparing Content- and Marker-Based Tags. In IEEE Pervasive Computing, 9 (2) pp. 46-55.
Perttula, Arttu, Carter, Scott and Denoue, Laurent (2009): Kartta: extracting landmarks near personalized points-of-interest from user generated content. In: Proceedings of 11th Conference on Human-computer interaction with mobile devices and services 2009. p. 72.
Most mobile navigation systems focus on answering the question, "I know where I want to go, now can you show me exactly how to get there?" While this approach works well for many tasks, it is not as useful for unconstrained situations in which user goals and spatial landscapes are more fluid, such as festivals or conferences. In this paper we describe the design and iteration of the Kartta system, which we developed to answer a slightly different question: "What are the most interesting areas here and how do I find them?"
© All rights reserved Perttula et al. and/or their publisher
Denoue, Laurent, Adcock, John, Carter, Scott and Golovchinsky, Gene (2009): WebNC: efficient sharing of web applications. In: Proceedings of the 20th ACM Conference on Hypertext and Hypermedia 2009. pp. 365-366.
WebNC is a system for efficiently sharing, retrieving and viewing web applications. Unlike existing screencasting and screensharing tools, WebNC is optimized to work with web pages where a lot of scrolling happens. WebNC uses a tile-based encoding to capture, transmit and deliver web applications, and relies only on dynamic HTML and JavaScript. The resulting webcasts require very little bandwidth and are viewable on any modern web browser including Firefox and Internet Explorer as well as browsers on the iPhone and Android platforms.
© All rights reserved Denoue et al. and/or their publisher
Carter, Scott and Denoue, Laurent (2008): PicNTell: a camcorder metaphor for screen recording. In: El-Saddik, Abdulmotaleb, Vuong, Son, Griwodz, Carsten, Bimbo, Alberto Del, Candan, K. Selcuk and Jaimes, Alejandro (eds.) Proceedings of the 16th International Conference on Multimedia 2008 October 26-31, 2008, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. pp. 869-872.
Churchill, Elizabeth F., Nelson, Les, Denoue, Laurent, Helfman, Jonathan and Murphy, Paul (2004): Sharing multimedia content with interactive public displays: a case study. In: Proceedings of DIS04: Designing Interactive Systems: Processes, Practices, Methods, & Techniques 2004. pp. 7-16.
Plasma Posters are large screen, digital, interactive poster-boards situated in public spaces, designed to facilitate informal content sharing within teams, groups, organizations and communities. While interest in interactive community poster boards has grown recently, few successful examples have been reported. In this paper we describe an ongoing installation of Plasma Posters within our organization, and report qualitative and quantitative data from 20 months of use showing the Posters have become an integral part of information sharing, complementing email and Web-based sharing. Success factors include our design process, the reliability and flexibility of the technology and the social setting of our organization. We briefly describe three external installations of the Plasma Poster Network in public places. We then reflect on content posting as "information staging" and the ways in which the public space itself becomes part of the "interface" to content.
© All rights reserved Churchill et al. and/or ACM Press
Denoue, Laurent, Nelson, Les and Churchill, Elizabeth F. (2003): A fast, interactive 3D paper-flier metaphor for digital bulletin boards. In: Proceedings of the 16th annural ACM Symposium on User Interface Software and Technology November, 2-5, 2003, Vancouver, Canada. pp. 169-172.
Nelson, Les, Denoue, Laurent and Churchill, Elizabeth F. (2003): AttrActive windows: active windows for pervasive computing applications. In: Johnson, Lewis and Andre, Elisabeth (eds.) International Conference on Intelligent User Interfaces 2003 January 12-15, 2003, Miami, Florida, USA. p. 326.
We introduce the AttrActive Windows user interface, a novel approach for presenting interactive content on large screen, interactive, digital, bulletin boards. Moving away from the desktop metaphor, AttrActive Windows are dynamic, non-uniform windows that can appear in different orientations and have autonomous behaviours to attract passers-by and invite interactions.
© All rights reserved Nelson et al. and/or ACM Press
Churchill, Elizabeth F., Nelson, Les, Denoue, Laurent and Girgensohn, Andreas (2003): The Plasma Poster Network: Posting Multimedia Content in Public Places. In: Proceedings of IFIP INTERACT03: Human-Computer Interaction 2003, Zurich, Switzerland. p. 599.
Golovchinsky, Gene and Denoue, Laurent (2002): Moving markup: repositioning freeform annotations. In: Beaudouin-Lafon, Michel (ed.) Proceedings of the 15th annual ACM symposium on User interface software and technology October 27-30, 2002, Paris, France. pp. 21-30.
In this paper, we describe Augur, a groupware calendar system to support
personal calendaring practices, informal workplace communication, and the
socio-technical evolution of the calendar system within a workgroup. Successful
design and deployment of groupware calendar systems have been shown to depend
on several converging, interacting perspectives. We describe calendar-based
work practices as viewed from these perspectives, and present the Augur system
in support of them. Augur allows users to retain the flexibility of personal
calendars by anticipating and compensating for inaccurate calendar entries and
idiosyncratic event names. We employ predictive user models of event
attendance, intelligent processing of calendar text, and discovery of shared
events to drive novel calendar visualizations that facilitate interpersonal
communication. In addition, we visualize calendar access to support privacy
management and long-term evolution of the calendar system.
© All rights reserved Golovchinsky and Denoue and/or ACM Press
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