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Topiary: A Tool for Prototyping Location- Enhanced Applications Yang Li, Jason I. Hong, James A. Landay, Presented by Daniel Schulman
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Topiary: A Tool for Prototyping Location-Enhanced Applications Yang Li, Jason I. Hong, James A. Landay, Presented by Daniel Schulman.

Jan 11, 2016

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Page 1: Topiary: A Tool for Prototyping Location-Enhanced Applications Yang Li, Jason I. Hong, James A. Landay, Presented by Daniel Schulman.

Topiary: A Tool for Prototyping Location-Enhanced Applications

Yang Li, Jason I. Hong, James A. Landay,

Presented by Daniel Schulman

Page 2: Topiary: A Tool for Prototyping Location-Enhanced Applications Yang Li, Jason I. Hong, James A. Landay, Presented by Daniel Schulman.

Location-Enhanced Applications

Use the location of users, others.Examples:

AT&T Find Friends service.E911

Hard to design:Need lots of technical expertise.Must use low-level sensing technology.

Page 3: Topiary: A Tool for Prototyping Location-Enhanced Applications Yang Li, Jason I. Hong, James A. Landay, Presented by Daniel Schulman.

Topiary

A prototyping tool for location-enhanced applications.

Supports iterative design without actually having to wander around for testing.

Page 4: Topiary: A Tool for Prototyping Location-Enhanced Applications Yang Li, Jason I. Hong, James A. Landay, Presented by Daniel Schulman.

Topiary

Active Map:Models a map and locations within it.

Scenario Producer:Specify which people and locations are

involved.Storyboard Workshop:

Storyboards can be triggered by scenarios.

Page 5: Topiary: A Tool for Prototyping Location-Enhanced Applications Yang Li, Jason I. Hong, James A. Landay, Presented by Daniel Schulman.

Topiary – User Testing

Testing is done via a Wizard-of-Oz setup.

The designer can move people and items around on the map.

If real sensor data is available, it can also be used (via wireless networking).

Page 6: Topiary: A Tool for Prototyping Location-Enhanced Applications Yang Li, Jason I. Hong, James A. Landay, Presented by Daniel Schulman.

Topiary – Evaluation

Participants created a tour-guide application.

All were able to use Topiary, and found it relatively easy.

The research team also iteratively designed a tour guide themselves.

Page 7: Topiary: A Tool for Prototyping Location-Enhanced Applications Yang Li, Jason I. Hong, James A. Landay, Presented by Daniel Schulman.

Critique

A useful new tool for a fairly new type of UI.

Based on lots of assumptions about the type of UI that is being designed:Heavily biased towards map-based UIs.There could be other kinds of location-

enhanced applications.

Page 8: Topiary: A Tool for Prototyping Location-Enhanced Applications Yang Li, Jason I. Hong, James A. Landay, Presented by Daniel Schulman.

Future Directions

Why restrict yourself to 2D maps?3D is important – what floor am I on? Is the map always the most important thing

to show the end-user? Is there always a single map?

Shifts in scale – from an outside to an inside map.

Page 9: Topiary: A Tool for Prototyping Location-Enhanced Applications Yang Li, Jason I. Hong, James A. Landay, Presented by Daniel Schulman.

Future Directions

Why restrict yourself to location?Can sense orientation, temperature,

lighting, movement, etc.The use of a Wizard-of-Oz setup for testing

can generalize – can Topiary’s interface also be generalized?