Patrick Baudisch TITLE Making sense on SMALL SCREENS ABSTRACT Today’s ‘smart’ cell phones are designed to allow users to perform a set of relatively simple tasks, such as reproducing driving directions or recalling bookmarked websites. More demanding variants of the same activities, such as route planning or the interactive exploration of the web have received only limited or no support. And why should they--it is more convenient for users to perform these activities on their PCs and to only upload the results to the device. This, of course, assumes that users have access to a PC. In most cases, however, this assumption is wrong. There are 1.5 billion cell phones worldwide, but only 400 million PCs. The majority of phone users live in 3rd world countries. For many of them the phone is the first and only digital device they own. In this talk I argue that these phones could be the opportunity to get access to the functionality of a networked computer and to participate in the digital life of the first world. I am addressing this scenario from a human-computer interaction perspective. How can we display complex documents on displays the size of a stamp? How can users interact with such documents? I am presenting a range of small-screen visualization techniques including ‘halo’ & ‘summary thumbnails' as well as my latest work on a input device called 'soap'--a new approach to interacting with very small devices. Slides: http://patrickbaudisch.com/publications/talks.html More information: http://patrickbaudisch.com/projects Bio: http://patrickbaudisch.com/biography