Bonfire: a nomadic system for hybrid laptop-tabletop interaction

  • Authors:
  • Shaun K. Kane;Daniel Avrahami;Jacob O. Wobbrock;Beverly Harrison;Adam D. Rea;Matthai Philipose;Anthony LaMarca

  • Affiliations:
  • University of Washington, Seattle, WA, USA;Intel Research Seattle, Seattle, WA, USA;University of Washington, Seattle, WA, USA;Intel Research Seattle, Seattle, WA, USA;Intel Research Seattle, Seattle, WA, USA;Intel Research Seattle, Seattle, WA, USA;Intel Research Seattle, Seattle, WA, USA

  • Venue:
  • Proceedings of the 22nd annual ACM symposium on User interface software and technology
  • Year:
  • 2009

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Abstract

We present Bonfire, a self-contained mobile computing system that uses two laptop-mounted laser micro-projectors to project an interactive display space to either side of a laptop keyboard. Coupled with each micro-projector is a camera to enable hand gesture tracking, object recognition, and information transfer within the projected space. Thus, Bonfire is neither a pure laptop system nor a pure tabletop system, but an integration of the two into one new nomadic computing platform. This integration (1) enables observing the periphery and responding appropriately, e.g., to the casual placement of objects within its field of view, (2) enables integration between physical and digital objects via computer vision, (3) provides a horizontal surface in tandem with the usual vertical laptop display, allowing direct pointing and gestures, and (4) enlarges the input/output space to enrich existing applications. We describe Bonfire's architecture, and offer scenarios that highlight Bonfire's advantages. We also include lessons learned and insights for further development and use.