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Introduction to Autelic

Nov 01, 2014

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Technology

Malysa Martin

Autelic is a non-profit association working to make technlogy easier for people who didn't grow up with it.
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Page 1: Introduction to Autelic
Page 2: Introduction to Autelic

Our Dream

Connect our friends and relatives to their digital community,easier,better,more…

Page 3: Introduction to Autelic

Current Issue

Page 4: Introduction to Autelic

Powerful Communities…

amacken
We should search for global or "Western Country" numbers to avoid bias and "complaints" about the numbers not being for "the right" country..., I'll try to find something too -Andrew Mackenzie 12/16/08 12:30 PM
Page 5: Introduction to Autelic

Powerful Communities…

1996: 3 companies out of 100had a web site

2008: 8 employees out of 10 connect almost every day.

Internet keeps gaining audience as a full

media both for work and

leisure

amacken
We should search for global or "Western Country" numbers to avoid bias and "complaints" about the numbers not being for "the right" country..., I'll try to find something too -Andrew Mackenzie 12/16/08 12:30 PM
Page 6: Introduction to Autelic

… Getting more pervasive…

Page 7: Introduction to Autelic

… Getting more pervasive…

Smart phones, satellite navigation systems, televisions, game stations… the number of connected appliances able to connect with people or look-up information in the internet

anywhere anytime is increasing every day.

Page 8: Introduction to Autelic

… With many left behind

1 person out of 3 has never

used the Internet

40% of households have no

Internet access

EU27

Sources: US Census 2003 data and Eurostat Q1 2008 Statistics on Information Society

US

more data…

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

15-24 25-34 35-44 45-54 55-64 65+

0%

10%

20%

30%

40%

50%

60%

70%

80%

90%

100%

Millions of Households (HH) % of HH with internet Access

amacken
is more confusing I think when you say two thirds for both and change the metric. I'd say two thirds have and only one third have...let's use the metrics related to those "left behind", i.e. those who don't connect.
Page 9: Introduction to Autelic

… With many left behind

1 person out of 3 has never

used the Internet

40% of households have no

Internet access

EU27

Sources: US Census 2003 data and Eurostat Q1 2008 Statistics on Information Society

US

more data…

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

15-24 25-34 35-44 45-54 55-64 65+

0%

10%

20%

30%

40%

50%

60%

70%

80%

90%

100%

Millions of Households (HH) % of HH with internet Access

There is an obvious digital divide between

the younger generations and the 55+.

Connection rates dropradically with age after 55.

amacken
is more confusing I think when you say two thirds for both and change the metric. I'd say two thirds have and only one third have...let's use the metrics related to those "left behind", i.e. those who don't connect.
Page 10: Introduction to Autelic

Why don’t people use Internet?

3,4%Other0,9%Concerns of child access0,5%Language barrier

2,0%Physical disabilities5,0%0,8%Privacy & security

23,0%No computer

23,0%4,5%Lack of skills

21,0% - Access25,0%

23,3% - EquipmentCost

2,3% - Lack of time14,0%2,1% - Have it elsewhere

37,0% - Don't need14,0%

39,4% - Don't wantLack of motivation

EUUSAt home:

Sources: US Census 2003 data and Eurostat Q1 2008 Statistics on Information Society

Page 11: Introduction to Autelic

Why don’t people use Internet?

3,4%Other0,9%Concerns of child access0,5%Language barrier

2,0%Physical disabilities5,0%0,8%Privacy & security

23,0%No computer

23,0%4,5%Lack of skills

21,0% - Access25,0%

23,3% - EquipmentCost

2,3% - Lack of time14,0%2,1% - Have it elsewhere

37,0% - Don't need14,0%

39,4% - Don't wantLack of motivation

EUUSAt home:

Sources: US Census 2003 data and Eurostat Q1 2008 Statistics on Information Society

Among major reasons why people don’t connect:

1. They don’t see the need,

2. Access is too costly,3. They don’t have the

skills.

Page 14: Introduction to Autelic

Internet as easy to use as…

Page 15: Introduction to Autelic

Internet as easy to use as…

What if connecting to one’s community was as easy as

using a normal home appliance

a washing machine, a microwave oven, a vacuum

cleaner or a phone…

?

Page 16: Introduction to Autelic

a research association for people friendly

technology

Our purpose Who we are Why we are different Research areas

Our role Contribution model Desired future Example projects

Web: www.autelic.org – Email: [email protected]

Page 17: Introduction to Autelic

Our purpose

Autelic is a non-profit association working to make technology easier to use and accessible for all, especially for those of us who didn't grow up with it.

Our goal is to lower current usage barriers enough for those people to finally take part in the information society, connecting with information and other people.

Page 18: Introduction to Autelic

Our purpose

Autelic is a non-profit association working to make technology easier to use and accessible for all, especially for those of us who didn't grow up with it.

Our goal is to lower current usage barriers enough for those people to finally take part in the information society, connecting with information and other people.

We believe that theprogress in ease of use towards our target users,

will be beneficial to all users.

Page 19: Introduction to Autelic

Why we are different…

Page 20: Introduction to Autelic

Why we are different…

Independent,Non-Profit

Page 21: Introduction to Autelic

Why we are different…

Independent,Non-Profit As a non-profit association,

we are NOT subject to the short term demands

ofshareholders and analysts.

Page 22: Introduction to Autelic

Why we are different…

Unconstrained

Independent,Non-Profit

Page 23: Introduction to Autelic

Why we are different…

Unconstrained

Independent,Non-Profit

“When a business only has a hammer, everything looks

like a nail”

We are unconstrained by the existing products, users,

or business segments.

Hence, we can break with the past and target non-

users of current systems, try new user interfaces, new

interaction metaphors… as they won’t be conditioned to

existing ones.

Page 24: Introduction to Autelic

Why we are different…

Unconstrained

Independent,Non-Profit

Page 25: Introduction to Autelic

Why we are different…

Unconstrained

User Centric,Exploratory

Independent,Non-Profit

Page 26: Introduction to Autelic

Why we are different…

Unconstrained

User Centric,Exploratory

Independent,Non-Profit

True breakthroughs and new approaches require different exploratory development methods and

focus.

A true “user centric” development process cannot deliver on a pre-defined, rigid, schedule.

Page 27: Introduction to Autelic

Why we are different…

Unconstrained

User Centric,Exploratory

Collaborative,Open

Independent,Non-Profit

Page 28: Introduction to Autelic

Why we are different…

Unconstrained

User Centric,Exploratory

Collaborative,Open

Independent,Non-Profit

We are an open association that can tap a large dispersed community of contributors

that may only get engaged if the results are to be public domain.

Page 29: Introduction to Autelic

Why we are different…

Unconstrained

User Centric,Exploratory

Collaborative,Open

Independent,Non-Profit

Page 30: Introduction to Autelic

Who we areAbout The Founders

20 years in product development and research

Management of SW quality and usability, development of SW, FW and Internet solutions

R&D Manager of start-up within Enterprise

Eric Erickson

Andrew Mackenzie

18 years in technology management and consulting, 13 years international

Global expertise in new business creation, business model and financial analysis

Product marketing, project management and software development

Psychologist & MBA (IT and Marketing)

10 years in R&D in the computer industry Management of partners and projects, Management of quality,

Electrical engineer, MBA and young entrepreneur

Paul Charette

Malysa Martin

18 years in software, consulting and telecommunications in three countries

Business development Program / Project Management IT Consulting

President Vice-President

Treasurer Secretary

Page 31: Introduction to Autelic

Who we areAbout The Founders

20 years in product development and research

Management of SW quality and usability, development of SW, FW and Internet solutions

R&D Manager of start-up within Enterprise

Eric Erickson

Andrew Mackenzie

18 years in technology management and consulting, 13 years international

Global expertise in new business creation, business model and financial analysis

Product marketing, project management and software development

Psychologist & MBA (IT and Marketing)

10 years in R&D in the computer industry Management of partners and projects, Management of quality,

Electrical engineer, MBA and young entrepreneur

Paul Charette

Malysa Martin

18 years in software, consulting and telecommunications in three countries

Business development Program / Project Management IT Consulting

President Vice-President

Treasurer Secretary

4 enthusiastic team players enjoying innovating togetheron projects that make sense.

66 years of experience of project management in the high tech industry

with complementary backgrounds in pure research, software

development, computer hardware and IT consulting.

Page 32: Introduction to Autelic

Research areasInvestigating, designing and testing solutions

User Profile Current usage of

technology Motivations Current barriers Desirable usage

User InteractionUser Understanding Architecture

Interaction metaphor Hardware design On-screen

readability Text input Identification and

authentication

Connectivity Client device Cloud computing Services

Page 33: Introduction to Autelic

Our role

Vision & Goal Setting

Dissemination of Results

Project Framework

Autelic Community

Projects

AutelicOwned

Projects

CollaborativeProjects

Page 34: Introduction to Autelic

Our role

Vision & Goal Setting

Dissemination of Results

Project Framework

Autelic Community

Projects

AutelicOwned

Projects

CollaborativeProjects

Three types of projects handling: • Autelic Community Projects: projects that

involves on line community of volunteering collaborators

• Autelic Owned Projects: projects that we run ourselves

• Collaborative Projects: projects that we co-run with institutions that share the same goals as we do and are ready to share the results.

Page 35: Introduction to Autelic

Our role

Vision & Goal Setting

Dissemination of Results

Project Framework

Autelic Community

Projects

AutelicOwned

Projects

CollaborativeProjects

Project Definition

Collaborative Knowledge Platform

Page 36: Introduction to Autelic

Our role

Vision & Goal Setting

Dissemination of Results

Project Framework

Autelic Community

Projects

AutelicOwned

Projects

CollaborativeProjects

Project Definition

Collaborative Knowledge Platform

Check www.autelic.org for scientific research

references, blogs, forums, wikis…

Page 37: Introduction to Autelic

Our role

Vision & Goal Setting

Dissemination of Results

Project Framework

Autelic Community

Projects

AutelicOwned

Projects

CollaborativeProjects

Project Definition

Collaborative Knowledge Platform

Project Management

Page 38: Introduction to Autelic

Our role

Vision & Goal Setting

Dissemination of Results

Project Framework

Autelic Community

Projects

AutelicOwned

Projects

CollaborativeProjects

Project Definition

Collaborative Knowledge Platform

Project Management

Fund Raising

Donations Sponsorship

Subsidies

Page 39: Introduction to Autelic

Our role

Vision & Goal Setting

Dissemination of Results

Project Framework

Autelic Community

Projects

AutelicOwned

Projects

CollaborativeProjects

Project Definition

Collaborative Knowledge Platform

Project Management

Execution

Fund Raising

Contributors

Donations Sponsorship

Subsidies

Execution

Projects are executed through the community contributions, ourselves

or in collaboration with other entities.

The ultimate goal is to share the results with all, openly, so that these results can be used by anyone

willing to industrialize, sell these products and services

Page 40: Introduction to Autelic

Our role

Vision & Goal Setting

Dissemination of Results

Project Framework

Autelic Community

Projects

AutelicOwned

Projects

CollaborativeProjects

Project Definition

Collaborative Knowledge Platform

Project Management

Execution

Fund Raising

Contributors

Donations Sponsorship

Subsidies

Execution

Page 41: Introduction to Autelic

Contribution model

Knowledge Platform

Networks

Blogs, forums

Wiki, Research Library

Open Source

Prototyping

Software Dev.

User Testing

Project Management

Fund

Page 42: Introduction to Autelic

Contribution model

Knowledge Platform

Networks

Blogs, forums

Wiki, Research Library

Open Source

Prototyping

Software Dev.

User Testing

Project Management

Fund

Autelic provides

a project management framework

for collaborative knowledge creation,

sharing and discussion,

as well as

prototyping, software

development and testing

Page 43: Introduction to Autelic

Contribution model

Knowledge Platform

Networks

Blogs, forums

Wiki, Research Library

Open Source

Prototyping

Software Dev.

User Testing

Project Management

Fund

Contributors

Donors

Community

Test Users

Page 44: Introduction to Autelic

Contribution model

Knowledge Platform

Networks

Blogs, forums

Wiki, Research Library

Open Source

Prototyping

Software Dev.

User Testing

Project Management

Fund

Contributors

Donors

Community

Test Users

Individuals can contributeby becoming:• Friends of Autelic, who want

to be kept posted, or share their experience, network…

• Community Contributors, voluntarily sharing knowledge, doing software development or testing

• Test Users who help us evaluate work done in a real use environment

• Donors, giving money or equipment.

Page 45: Introduction to Autelic

Contribution model

Knowledge Platform

Networks

Blogs, forums

Wiki, Research Library

Open Source

Prototyping

Software Dev.

User Testing

Project Management

Fund

Contributors

Donors Foundations

Corporations

Research Institutes

Collaborations

Donors&

Sponsors

Community

Institutions

Test Users

Page 46: Introduction to Autelic

Contribution model

Knowledge Platform

Networks

Blogs, forums

Wiki, Research Library

Open Source

Prototyping

Software Dev.

User Testing

Project Management

Fund

Contributors

Donors Foundations

Corporations

Research Institutes

Collaborations

Donors&

Sponsors

Community

Institutions

Test Users

Institutions can contribute as…

• Collaborators, voluntarily sharing knowledge, research work, development, test…

• Donors or Sponsors, through money, equipment or service donation.

Page 47: Introduction to Autelic

Contribution model

Knowledge Platform

Networks

Blogs, forums

Wiki, Research Library

Open Source

Prototyping

Software Dev.

User Testing

Project Management

Fund

Contributors

Donors Foundations

Corporations

Research Institutes

Collaborations

Donors&

Sponsors

Community

Institutions

Test Users

Page 48: Introduction to Autelic

Desired future of elderly and ICTA participatory study by Steven Eggermont and Heidi Vandebosch

Want Don’t Want

1. Social relationship

• ICT to support other social contacts: email with friends, spreading and getting information, keeping in touch when immobile…37,8%

• Personal face to face contact: family life, parties…24,4%

• Disappearance of physical human contact …48,8%

2. Health • Technology is a means improve quality of life: faster diagnosis, better treatment, monitoring and alarming, independent leaving even sick…38,7%

• Availability of information to medical personal to optimize health care system…20,2%

• Intrusion of privacy: abuse and commercialization… 27%

• Disappearance of physical human contact… 21.3%%

• Needless extension of human life and suffering… 16,9%

3. Leisure • ICT to support and promote leisure activities (information), as a mean to connect people with similar interest, to create free time…42,9%

• Lack of alternative leisure or information channel

• Disappearance of physical human contact…23.5%%

Page 49: Introduction to Autelic

Desired future of elderly and ICTA participatory study by Steven Eggermont and Heidi Vandebosch

Want Don’t Want

1. Social relationship

• ICT to support other social contacts: email with friends, spreading and getting information, keeping in touch when immobile…37,8%

• Personal face to face contact: family life, parties…24,4%

• Disappearance of physical human contact …48,8%

2. Health • Technology is a means improve quality of life: faster diagnosis, better treatment, monitoring and alarming, independent leaving even sick…38,7%

• Availability of information to medical personal to optimize health care system…20,2%

• Intrusion of privacy: abuse and commercialization… 27%

• Disappearance of physical human contact… 21.3%%

• Needless extension of human life and suffering… 16,9%

3. Leisure • ICT to support and promote leisure activities (information), as a mean to connect people with similar interest, to create free time…42,9%

• Lack of alternative leisure or information channel

• Disappearance of physical human contact…23.5%%

Based on a panel of537 participants

over 50 to 75 +40 very elderly,

we know that 50+ main motivator in using ICT is

social relationship.

Page 50: Introduction to Autelic

Example project: Photo Messenger

Imagine a trivial device:a basic photo frame

with seeming simplicity…

Page 51: Introduction to Autelic

Example project: Photo Messenger

On which you can share your favourite digital albums remotely and

automatically…

Page 52: Introduction to Autelic

Example project: Photo Messenger

Hello Mom,How are you today? Love !!!

Send short simple message…

Page 53: Introduction to Autelic

Example project: Photo Messenger

Hello Mom,How are you today? Love !!!

And that evolves functionalities as its

owner gets more confident…

Page 54: Introduction to Autelic

Example project: Photo MessengerOur Work

Literature Research

We are exploring existing research work about:

- Elder’s positive and negative needs and attitudes toward ICTs,

- Photo work, photo sharing,

- User interface research and innovations,

- Remote support, cloud architectures…

Page 55: Introduction to Autelic

Example project: Photo MessengerOur Work

Literature Research

We are tracking digital photo frame products

and internet appliances innovations.

Market Intelligence

Page 56: Introduction to Autelic

Example project: Photo MessengerOur Work

Literature Research Market Intelligence

Prototyping

We’ve designed a rough concept prototype and are keeping it growing.

Page 57: Introduction to Autelic

Example project: Photo MessengerOur Work

Literature Research Market Intelligence

Prototyping

Evaluation

Domain Identification

Quality Criteria

Experts

We are constantly testing our concept against:

- Existing ones,

- Opinions of experts,

- Experience of target users.

Page 58: Introduction to Autelic

Example project: Photo MessengerOur Work

Literature Research Market Intelligence

Prototyping

Evaluation

Domain Identification

Quality Criteria

Experts

Research Project

Based on our finding, we are building a project plan including specific user research, proof of concept and full service / product development and validation.

To support this project #1, we are actively seeking funding through national and European subsidies as well as foundations and other public and private entities.

Page 59: Introduction to Autelic

Example project: Photo MessengerOur Work

Literature Research Market Intelligence

Domain Identification

Quality Criteria

Evaluation

Prototyping

Sharing Knowledge

Research Project

Experts

We share the results of our research through networking, conferences,

Autelic Research Library, Experience Blog, Forum, Community Wiki.

Check www.autelic.org

Page 60: Introduction to Autelic

Example project: Photo MessengerOur Work

Literature Research Market Intelligence

Domain Identification

Quality Criteria

Evaluation

Prototyping

Sharing Knowledge

Research Project

Experts

Page 61: Introduction to Autelic
Page 62: Introduction to Autelic

Internet Usage Statistics

Back to the presentation…

Population and Households - Internet Access

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

15-24 25-34 35-44 45-54 55-64 65+Age Group

Mill

ions

0%

10%

20%

30%

40%

50%

60%

70%

Population Households (HH) Households with Internet % of Household with Internet

Page 63: Introduction to Autelic

Individual Participation

• Get regular project updates

• Contribute to blogs and forums• Donate equipment or

moneyFund Autelic activities in general

Donors

• Share their experience• Share useful contacts

Support Autelic, Follow progress

Friends

• Share knowledge or past work

• Software development in Open Source

• Share experience or Test Results

• Provide Useful Contacts

Contribute to research projects and prototyping efforts

Contributors

• Use our research first hand

• Time and effort, cover operating costs

Help evaluate ideas and work done

Test Users

• View information on Autelic web

Get to know usAnyone

BenefitsContributionGoalType of Participation

Page 64: Introduction to Autelic

Institutional Participation

• Own Goals Met better

• Visibility• Use of combined project outcome

• Joint execution of collaborative projects

• Complementary and pooled Knowledge, Experience, Funding and Resources

Leverage Autelic for a greater outcome on a specific project

Collaboration

•Visibility• Donate equipment or a grant

Fund a particular research project or activity

Sponsorship

• Donate equipment or grant

Fund Autelic activities in general

Donation

BenefitsContributionGoalType of Participation