Sound pryer in forthcoming book on new music technology
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 →
Alexandra Weilenmann on Swedish Radio
The 1st of December, Alexandra Weilenmann was interviewed on her research on mobile phone use, in Radio P5 Stockholm.
Sound Pryer on several blogs
Articles on Sound Pryer are available on several blogs: engadget, networked perfomance blog and near near future.
“Final seminar”
Mattias Esbjörnsson will present his thesis at a ”final seminar” on Wednesday December 1st between 13.00 and 15.30 at the Interactive Institute, Karlavägen 108. The final seminar is the last … Continue Reading →
Seminar with David Martin
David Martin, Lancaster University, will hold a seminar with the following title: Ethnographic fieldwork on Medical Information Systems (abstract). Tuesday the 30th of November, 15.00-17.00. A text will be made … Continue Reading →
Seminar with Giulio Jacucci
Giulio Jacucci, Helsinki Institute for Information Technology, will hold a seminar with the following title: Interaction as Performance: Cases of Configuring Physical Interfaces in Mixed Media (abstract). Tuesday the 23 … Continue Reading →
New publication
Alexandra Weilenmann has published an article on how teenagers share mobile phones: “Kan inte du svara?” Om hur ungdomar samsas om sina mobiltelefoner, in Locus 2/04.
New mobility members
The studio has grown with two new members. Henrik Andersson and Christoffer Schmiterlöw will make their masters thesis, exploring the use of accelerometers for interaction in mobile games.
Invitation to Brunel University
Oskar Juhlin is invited as “Senior Visiting Fellow in Communications” to Senior Lecturer Mark Perry and the Department of Information Systems and Computing at Brunel University, London during March 2005. … Continue Reading →
Read about Sound Pryer
David Pescovitz writes about Sound Pryer under the title “Wireless Music’s New Social Sound” in TheFeature.