Cited by
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Conductor +
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Cites
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ConnecTable +
, Bumping +
, Stitching +
, Codex +
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Description
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Girouard et al. propose 5 techniques for i … Girouard et al. propose 5 techniques for interacting with paper-like displays. The Pile is a technique for loosely grouping displays by allowing the user to freely rearrange the pile, by moving the displays or inserting them throughout. A stack is a set of displays neatly arranged together. It is possible to change the location of individual displays and to bend them for quick flicking through. Displays can be arranged as a fan, which allows the user to rotate individual displays. A Linear Overlap enables displays to be arranged with a partial overlap, allowing the user to partially cover or uncover certain areas. Finally, collation allows placing displays side-by-side along a shared edge.displays side-by-side along a shared edge. +
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Design goal
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Designing new interaction techniques +
, Supporting design of interfaces for dynamic collections of devices +
, Supporting interaction in a free manner +
, Supporting joint interaction with information across devices +
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Design motivation
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Designing new types of interactions +
, Creating engaging experiences +
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Device type
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Private +
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Enabling technology
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Displays +
, Networking technologies +
, Sensors +
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Pattern family
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Display Grouping +
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Reference
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Girouard, A., Tarun, A., & Vertegaal, R. (2012). DisplayStacks: interaction techniques for stacks of flexible thin-film displays. In Proceedings of the SIGCHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems (pp. 2431-2440). ACM. +
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Related to
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Bumping +
, Stitching +
, Codex +
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Summary
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DisplayStacks are paper-like screens that can be arranged in piles, stacks or fans, or collated side-by-side or slightly overlapping. Each arrangement prompts the stack to react accordingly, allowing for different interactions. +
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Categories |
Interaction techniques +
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Modification dateThis property is a special property in this wiki.
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4 June 2015 12:37:43 +
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