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Martin Randles

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Publications by Martin Randles (bibliography)

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2011
 
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England, David, Randles, Martin and Taleb-Bendiab, Azzelarabe (2011): Designing interaction for the cloud. In: Proceedings of ACM CHI 2011 Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems 2011. pp. 2453-2456.

Cloud computing is moving from a buzzword to a set of useful services which promise the benefits of Computing as a utility, removing the responsibility for infrastructure and software application management from end users and organizations. However, the full implications of moving to a cloud-based platform on the user experience are not clear. In this workshop we intend to bring together researchers and practitioners from various fields where cloud computing is becoming an issue. We wish to examine the impact of cloud computing on the design of the user experience at the individual and organizational level.

© All rights reserved England et al. and/or their publisher

2009
 
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England, David, Randles, Martin and Taleb-Bendiab, A. (2009): Runtime user interface design and adaptation. In: Proceedings of the HCI09 Conference on People and Computers XXIII 2009. pp. 463-470.

In this paper, a method of generating appropriate user interfaces at runtime is investigated. It is proposed to use the established formalism of Situation Calculus to describe and specify user interfaces. It is shown how specific features of the formalism provide many desirable properties in the design and specification of user interfaces that are adaptable to context and composed at runtime. The formalism provides a provably correct deployment, whilst giving a means of deliberation on the optimum configuration that is directly compiled through a developed Neptune scripting language. The major features of the formalism and programming language are described together with an illustration of how this has been used in an implemented e-health case study for decision support with partner institutions in breast cancer care. It is shown how pluggable decision models may be introduced and system adaptation to clinician context achieved, whilst system integrity is maintained.

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Changes to this page (author)

05 Jul 2011: Added
03 Nov 2010: Added

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May 24

For a list of all the ways technology has failed to improve the quality of life, please press three.

-- Alice Kahn

 
 

Featured chapter

Read the fascinating history of Wearable Computing, told by its father, Steve Mann

Read Steve's chapter !

 
 

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