Designing interactive paper: lessons from three augmented reality projects
IWAR '98 Proceedings of the international workshop on Augmented reality : placing artificial objects in real scenes: placing artificial objects in real scenes
The augurscope: a mixed reality interface for outdoors
Proceedings of the SIGCHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems
Books with voices: paper transcripts as a physical interface to oral histories
Proceedings of the SIGCHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems
The Myth of the Paperless Office
The Myth of the Paperless Office
Tangible interfaces for manipulating aggregates of digital information
Tangible interfaces for manipulating aggregates of digital information
A taxonomy for and analysis of tangible interfaces
Personal and Ubiquitous Computing
Paper windows: interaction techniques for digital paper
Proceedings of the SIGCHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems
SIGGRAPH '05 ACM SIGGRAPH 2005 Emerging technologies
reacTIVision: a computer-vision framework for table-based tangible interaction
Proceedings of the 1st international conference on Tangible and embedded interaction
Proceedings of the 1st international conference on Tangible and embedded interaction
Understanding why we preserve some things and discard others in the context of interaction design
Proceedings of the SIGCHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems
A death in the family: opportunities for designing technologies for the bereaved
Proceedings of the SIGCHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems
The Future of Looking Back (Microsoft Research)
The Future of Looking Back (Microsoft Research)
CHI and the future robot enslavement of humankind: a retrospective
CHI '13 Extended Abstracts on Human Factors in Computing Systems
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An explosion in the availability of online records has led to surging interest in genealogy. In this paper we explore the present state of genealogical practice, with a particular focus on how the process of research is recorded and later accessed by other researchers. We then present our response, ChronoTape, a novel tangible interface for supporting family history research. The ChronoTape is an example of a temporal tangible interface, an interface designed to enable the tangible representation and control of time. We use the ChronoTape to interrogate the value relationships between physical and digital materials, personal and professional practices, and the ways that records are produced, maintained and ultimately inherited. In contrast to designs that support existing genealogical practice, ChronoTape captures and embeds traces of the researcher within the document of their own research, in three ways: (i) it ensures physical traces of digital research; (ii) it generates personal material around the use of impersonal genealogical data; (iii) it allows for graceful degradation of both its physical and digital components in order to deliberately accommodate the passage of information into the future.