As computers are becoming cheaper, faster and smaller, they start to
appear in a wide variety of form factors in our everyday
environments. The "Personal Computer" is slowly replaced by a
multitude of computationally enhanced objects and devices, and
computing becomes ubiquitous. One facette of this trend is the current
digitization of personal media, such as photos or music.
A well established interaction concept, such as the desktop metaphor
for the PC, is currently not in sight for this novel form of
computing, and our ways of interacting with digital media collections
have in some respects become poorer than the interaction with their
analog predecessors.
The Fluidum project (
http://www.fluidum.org/) investigates interaction
concepts for ubiquitous computing in our everyday environments, and
the management of media collections provides many usage scenarios.
The talk will discuss, how this open and interdiscipinary field of research
can be explored, and it will present some of the project's results.