Wednesday, November 4, 2009
ANN: Trinity College Receives Major HFOSS Funding
HARTFORD, Conn., Oct. 5 (AScribe Newswire) -- The Humanitarian FOSS Project (HFOSS), a collaborative three-college program that creates free open source software (FOSS) for the common good, received a major vote of confidence recently with the awarding of an $800,000, two-year grant from the National Science Foundation (NSF) under its Pathways to Revitalized Undergraduate Computing Education program (CPATH).
Trinity's share of the grant amounts to $467,636, with the balance divided between Wesleyan University and Connecticut College, the two schools that have partnered with Trinity in the development of the free software that benefits the community.
The funds represent an extension of a half-million dollar grant that the three colleges had already received, bringing the total amount provided by the NSF to roughly $1.3 million. Although it is a collaborative project, HFOSS is based at Trinity and is headed by Ralph Morelli, a professor of computer science. The project director is Trishan R. de Lanerolle.
Full article
ANN: National Academies Press publications
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[Fwd: CFP: 2nd Workshop on Collaborative Information Seeking (@ CSCW 2010)]
(in conjunction with CSCW 2010, Savannah, Georgia, February 2010)
- position paper deadline: November 20th, 2009
- workshop date: February 7, 2010
- workshop website: http://workshops.fxpal.com/cscw2010cis/
Although most digital information-seeking tools are designed for solo use, studies have shown that groups of many types (e.g., students, families, and knowledge workers) have shared information needs that are not adequately served by status quo technologies. This workshop seeks to bring together researchers with backgrounds in CSCW, social computing, information retrieval, library sciences, and HCI to discuss the research challenges associated with the emerging field of collaborative information seeking. This workshop will serve as an opportunity to make connections with researchers with diverse backgrounds, to learn about participants' works-in-progress, and to brainstorm on topics of mutual interest, such as developing standardized evaluation tasks for collaborative information seeking systems and considering how new media such as social networking and microblogging tools can play a role in collaborative information seeking.
Questions? Contact the workshop organizers, Meredith Ringel Morris (MSR), Gene Golovchinksy (FXPAL), and Jeremy Pickens (FXPAL) at cscw2010@fxpal.com<mailto:cscw2010@fxpal.com<mailto:cscw2010@fxpal.com%3cmailto:cscw2010@fxpal.com>>. This workshop follows our first Workshop on Collaborative Information Seeking, which took place at JCDL 2008 -- the first workshop resulted in a lot of great ideas and a special issue of Information Processing and Management on CIS, so we are excited to be able to bring this topic to the CSCW venue!
Tuesday, November 3, 2009
CFP: UX Magazine: Usable Accessibility: Inclusion, Access, Usability]
usable accessibility - inclusion, access and usability.
We welcome articles that take a broad view of this theme, including barriers
with access to information technology based on disability, literacy,
availability of technology (including networks and even electricity), and
other geographical, financial, social and cultural barriers.
We prefer practical articles--stories about research methods, case studies
and design solutions that overcome these barriers--or articles that look
forward to solutions.
The schedule is:
1 December 2009 - Article proposals (short summaries of the key
points in your article) due.
1 February 2009 - Articles due
May, 2009 - Issue published
UX Magazine articles are typically between 750 and 2500 words. They are
written in an active, personal voice. Authors work with a member of the
editorial board to prepare their articles for publication.
For more information about UX Magazine editorial guidelines
http://www.usabilityprofessionals.org/upa_publications/user_experience/editorial/
(Feel free to forward and/or to contact me for more information)
Susan Dray
Director of Publications
Usability Professionals' Association
Monday, November 2, 2009
CFP: CATaC'10 - Vancouver, Canada
Committee, we are very pleased to pass on to you the Call for Papers for
CATaC (Cultural Attitudes towards Technology and Communication) 2010,
"Diffusion 2.0: Computing, mobility, and the next generations".
Venue: University of British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada
Dates: 15-18 June 2010
Papers Due: 18 January 2010
The CATaC conference series provides a premier international forum for current research on how diverse cultural attitudes shape the implementation and use of information and communication technologies (ICTs). The conference series brings together scholars from around the globe who provide diverse perspectives, both in terms of the specific culture(s) they highlight in their presentations and discussions, and in terms of the discipline(s) through which they approach the conference theme.
CATaC'10 will feature keynote addresses by Dr Linc Kesler (First Nations Studies, The University of British Columbia) and Dr John Willinsky (Stanford University School of Education).
Original full papers (especially those which connect theoretical frameworks with specific examples of cultural values and practices) and short papers (e.g. describing current research projects and preliminary
results) are invited. Topics of particular interest include but are not limited to:
- Mobile technologies in developing countries
- New layers of imaging and texting interactions fostering and/or threatening cultural diversity
- Theoretical and practical approaches to analyzing "culture"
- Impact of mobile technologies on privacy and surveillance
- Gender, sexuality and identity issues in social networks
- Cultural diversity in e-learning and/or m-learning
Both short (3-5 pages) and long (10-15 pages) original papers are sought.
See "submissions" on the conference website - http://www.catacconference.org - for information about submitting papers and formatting guidelines.
The conference web site also provides further details regarding accommodations, submission procedures, etc.
We look forward to receiving your submissions and to welcoming you to Vancouver in 2010!
Local Co-Chair: Leah Macfadyen (UBC)
Local Co-Chair: Kenneth Reeder (UBC)
Program Chair: Herbert Hrachovec (University of Vienna)
Executive Committee: Lorna Heaton (Université de Montréal, Canada) Maja van der Velden (University of Oslo, Norway)
Fay Sudweeks (Co-Chair, CATaC)
Charles Ess (Co-Chair, CATaC)
------
Dr Fay Sudweeks
Associate Professor Emerita
School of Information Technology
Murdoch University
Murdoch WA 6149 Australia
Tel: +61-8-9360-2364; Fax: +61-8-9360-2941
Email: sudweeks@murdoch.edu.au
Web: www.it.murdoch.edu.au/~sudweeks/ <https://www.mail.murdoch.edu.au/exchweb/bin/redir.asp?URL=http://www.it.murdoch.edu.au/~sudweeks/s>
Co-Chair, CATaC conferences: www.catacconference.org <https://www.mail.murdoch.edu.au/exchweb/bin/redir.asp?URL=http://www.catacconference.org/>