----- Forwarded message from Irina Shklovski <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> ----- Date: Fri, 20 Jan 2006 14:46:56 -0500 From: Irina Shklovski <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: [Air-l] Reminder CFP: Special Issue on Public Computing in City Contexts To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
This is a reminder that call for articles for a special issue of IEEE Computer on Public Computing in the City ends **February 15, 2006** We are seeking articles approximately 6000 words in length (including figures and references) Author guidelines and submission instructions are available at www.computer.org/portal/pages/computer/mc/author.html Please send inquiries to the guest editors: Michele Chang <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> and Irina Shklovski <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> --------------------------- Call for Articles for IEEE Computer Computer seeks articles for a special issue on public computing in city contexts, to appear in August 2006. Guest editors are Michele Chang from Intel and Irina Shklovski from Carnegie Mellon University. In recent years, forces of technology, culture, and society have converged to reshape urban life. The urban experience has quickly emerged as a major focus for research on issues of mobility, location-based services, and pervasive computing. A citys complexities, embodied in its social, historical, and technological infrastructures, make it a viable alternative to the controlled environment of the lab. Yet, as urban experience becomes an increasingly explored avenue for pervasive computing research and application design, there is the risk of approaching the city as a backdrop a site for exploratory activities that presumes a dense population of users without considering the more complex aspects of city life. This special issue will be devoted to bringing members of the human-computer interaction community together with researchers and practitioners from the fields of urban planning, architecture, and design to examine public interfaces and their effects on the urban environment. Public interfaces are systems that foster public dialog, facilitate the exchange of information and services, or encourage interaction between public entities and city inhabitants. Computer encourages submissions reporting systematic empirical studies or critical analyses of interdisciplinary research as well as descriptions of technology design and development. Topics of particular interest include computing as a shared resource, surveillance and personal boundaries in public spaces, access as a means of control and discrimination, and supporting individuals in the production of knowledge. The deadline for submitting papers is **15 February 2006**. _______________________________________________ The [EMAIL PROTECTED] mailing list is provided by the Association of Internet Researchers http://aoir.org Subscribe, change options or unsubscribe at: http://listserv.aoir.org/listinfo.cgi/air-l-aoir.org Join the Association of Internet Researchers: http://www.aoir.org/ ----- End forwarded message ----- --- You are currently subscribed to telecom-cities as: [EMAIL PROTECTED] To unsubscribe send a blank email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] Manage your mail settings at http://forums.nyu.edu/cgi-bin/nyu.pl?enter=telecom-cities RSS feed of list traffic: http://www.mail-archive.com/telecom-cities@forums.nyu.edu/maillist.xml