New mobility member
Today Elias Arnestrand worked his first day in the studio. In his master thesis work he will investigate speed trap SMS services. Elias is studying at Uppsala University (STS-engineer).
Mobility Studio at Stockholm University
Today Elias Arnestrand worked his first day in the studio. In his master thesis work he will investigate speed trap SMS services. Elias is studying at Uppsala University (STS-engineer).
Backseat Playground is a new mobility studio project launched in collaboration with digital artist John Paul Bichard. It is a mobile gaming research project that will enable kids to play … Continue Reading →
The Backseat Playground website is now up and running and the project appears on more than 20 blogs. A few examples are: near near future, Smart Mobs, Engadget, Thinking Machine … Continue Reading →
Alexandra Weilenmann of Mobility was one of the jury members selecting this year’s winner of Siemens Design Challenge. The five finalists and winner will be presented on Wednesday 26 February.
Yesterday Madlene Lindström worked her first day in the studio. She will conduct her master thesis work in the Rally project. Madlene is studying Interaction Design at Umeå Institute of … Continue Reading →
The full paper From Ethnography on Infrastructure Management to Initial User Feedback on PlaceMemo written by Mattias Esbjörnsson has been accepted to Personal and Ubiquitous Computing: Theme issue on Interactive … Continue Reading →
John Paul Bichard, will hold a seminar introducing his work and especially Urban Tapestries and the Evidencia series on hybrid spaces (more info). Wednesday the 22nd of December, 15.00-17.00. For … Continue Reading →
A book chapter, called Car Drivers using Sound Pryer – Field trials on Shared Music Listening in Traffic Encounters, written by Mattias Östergren and Oskar Juhlin will appear in the … Continue Reading →
The 1st of December, Alexandra Weilenmann was interviewed on her research on mobile phone use, in Radio P5 Stockholm.
Articles on Sound Pryer are available on several blogs: engadget, networked perfomance blog and near near future.