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Your Life as a Movie

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Your Life as a Movie Sailesh Chutani Director, Worldwide University Relations Microsoft Research What if.. Everything you ever say, hear, observe, do, and sense is ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Your Life as a Movie


1
Your Life as a Movie
  • Sailesh Chutani
  • Director, Worldwide University Relations
  • Microsoft Research

2
What if..
  • Everything you ever say, hear, observe, do, and
    sense is recorded
  • Those recordings are stored permanently and can
    be accessed easily
  • You could analyze or modify copies of these
    recordings and share them

3
Some Questions
  • Is this scenario technically feasible?
  • What would such a future look like?
  • What new opportunities and risks will we be
    confronted with?
  • Elements of such a future are already here but
    just not uniformly distributed (to paraphrase
    William Gibson)

4
Microsoft Research
  • Founded in 1991
  • Staff of over 700 in over 55 areas
  • Internationally recognized research teams
  • 200 WW university relationships
  • Research lab locations
  • Redmond, Washington
  • San Francisco, California
  • Cambridge, United Kingdom
  • Beijing, Peoples Republic of China
  • Mountain View, California

5
A University CS Department inside Microsoft
  • University organizational model
  • Flat structure, critical mass groups
  • Open research environment
  • Aggressive publication of results in
    peer-reviewed literature
  • Frequent visitors, daily seminars
  • Strong ties to University Research
  • Nearly 15 of basic research budget directly
    invested in Universities
  • Lab grants, research grants, fellowships, etc.
  • Hundreds of interns and visitors

6
MSR Mission
  • Expand the state of the art in each of the areas
    in which we do research
  • Rapidly transfer innovative technologies into
    Microsoft products
  • Ensure that Microsoft products have a future

7
Expanding the State of the Art
  • Thousands of peer-reviewed publications
  • 13 of papers at 2001 CHI (UI)
  • 20 of papers at 1996 SIGGRAPH (graphics)
  • 25 of papers at 1999 PLDI (prog languages)
  • 30 of papers at 2001 PLDI
  • More papers at SIGGRAPH 2003, SIGMOD 2004 , SIGIR
    2004 and other key conferences than any other
    organization
  • Community leadership
  • Professional societies
  • Journals
  • Conferences

8
Segmenting the Problem
  • Information Capture
  • Storage
  • Query and Retrieval
  • Analysis and Processing

9
SenseCamA Digital Memory for Everyone
  • Lyndsay Williams Ken Wood _at_ MSRC and the
    MyLifeBits team _at_ BARC

10
SenseCam
  • Essentially a Black Box data and image recorder
    for the human body
  • Current wearable prototype can be worn for a day
    and captures up to 2000 images in that time
  • Image capture triggered by sensors, e.g. motion,
    light, temperature, people in field of view, ...
  • Sensor data is also recorded for later
    presentation, analysis, and correlation

11
Ultra Wide-Angle Lens
  • Captures everything regardless of exact camera
    orientation

12
Image Stabilisation
  • Accelerometer measures motion of the device
  • When any sensor indicates image capture, we wait
    a few tens of milliseconds to capture image when
    movement is less than 10 degrees/second if
    possible
  • Greatly reduces the number of blurred images

Before
After
13
A Short Walk Through Cambridge
14
How does SenseCam work?
  • Accelerometers for motion detection
  • Passive Infrared (PIR) sensors triggered by
    people or other living beings in front of camera
  • Digital sensors for light level and temperature
  • Images captured automatically on sensor events
    caused by, e.g.
  • turning around, sitting down, standing up,
    running, falling over, ...
  • moving between locations (rooms, car, bus,
    indoor/outdoor, etc.)
  • meeting a friend in the street
  • Simple hand gesture allows intentional image
    capture
  • Accelerometers also allow image stabilisation

15
SenseCam Applications
  • Personal memory enhancement
  • Where did I leave my umbrella?
  • What was the name of that wine we had last week?
  • What was written on the whiteboard?
  • Tourism
  • Automatic photo journals or blogs of specific
    trips, e.g. to the Edinburgh Festival
  • Clinical support for the memory-impaired
  • We are working with a Cambridge neuropsychologist
    on a trial for Alzheimers patients

16
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17
Future
  • Now building next-gen SenseCams
  • smaller, better power management, audio trigger,
    wireless comms

18
Storage Needs
  • Number of seconds in 80 years 606024365802,5
    22,880,000
  • Data recording rate for MPEG-4 is 4Mb/s
  • Storage required for full motion video of 80
    years of someones life is 10k tera bits or 10
    peta bits (1015)
  • Cost of such a storage in todays terms is
    approximately 10m
  • Storage capacity is doubling every year, in 10
    years 10 peta bits may cost lt10k

19
Storage Trends
Source Ed Grochowski, IBM Research Almaden
20
Moores Law
A threshold event will take place early in the
21st century the emergence of machines more
intelligent than their creators. By 2019, a
1,000 computer will match the processing power
of the human brain - about 20 million billion
calculations per second. Organizing these
resources - the software of intelligence - will
take us to 2029, by which time your average
personal computer will be equivalent to 1,000
human brains. -- Ray Kurzweil
21
Human Scale Storage
  • Terabyte
  • 1600 today
  • 400 in 2-3 years
  • Terabyte can hold
  • A lifetime of all your conversations
  • A year of what you can see

22
Querying
  • When did I meet the Dalai Lama?
  • How long did I live in Lausanne?
  • How many people did I encounter in my life with
    whom I spend more than 5 minutes in conversation?
  • Where was I on my wifes birthday during the last
    10 years?
  • What were the scariest moments in my
    mountaineering trips?

23
Stuff Ive Seen (SIS)
  • Support information re-use
  • Today
  • Many locations
  • Many interfaces
  • With SIS
  • Unified index
  • Fast, flexible search
  • Immediate update
  • Rich UI possibilities for your content

24
SIS Usage Observations
  • Very short queries (1.6 words), quick
    filtering/sorting
  • Few searches for best matching item
  • Know and use other attributes
  • Age of items opened
  • 50 more than one month old, some up to 8 years
  • Importance of people
  • 25 of queries involve people
  • Importance of time
  • Date by far the most common sort attribute
  • Useful date varies by source

25
Contextualizing Search
  • Search is not the end goal
  • Goal is information management in the context of
    ongoing work activities
  • Search always available
  • Search from within apps
  • Show results in context of apps

26
MemoryLens
  • Harness models of human memory
  • to assist with navigating large
  • stores of personal content

27
  • MemoryLens Search UI

28
Modeling the interface after the way people think
feel
  • Cognition
  • Memory
  • associations vs. facts/details
  • Deep History
  • objects recede vs. disappear
  • Dynamic organization
  • multiple simultaneous categories vs. fixed
  • Personality Emotion
  • Know what people care about and use to help
    organize
  • Watch users habits behavior to customize
    experience
  • Context
  • Many people, places and events

29
  • MemoryLens LifeBrowser

Adjustable threshold for
memorability
30
Walkthroughs
  • Re-live the past, explore the events as they
    happened at your own pace
  • Analogous to action replay but at a large scale
  • DEMO

31
WWMX (wwmx.org) Geography for Photography
  • The World-Wide Media eXchange is
  • a centralized index of
  • the worlds image media
  • tagged by location (and other standard
    metadata).

32
Why Location for Photos?
  • Provides immediate context, hints at semantics
  • E.g., photos taken at Disneyland, video shot in
    Hawaii
  • Repeatedly appears in user studies regarding
    organization
  • Family trips strongly associated with location
  • Event time location
  • Subject as person doing something somewhere
  • Universal index (like date/time)
  • Independent of ontology/taxonomy, language,
    culture, etc.
  • Familiar visual browsing UI via maps
  • Scales well
  • Technology to acquire location becoming common
  • GPS, e911 services, radio-tower-based,
    802.11-based

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41
Applications
  • Real estate tours
  • Travel and tourism
  • Shared travelogues
  • Driving directions with photos of landmarks
  • Centralized media depository for community events
  • Etc.

42
Creating Art
  • Recordings can serve as the raw material for
    creating art
  • DEMO

43
Meta Questions
  • Who would regulate the recording of this
    information?
  • Who will own this information?
  • Who would be able to access it?
  • Should copies and modifications be allowed?
  • What would be the legitimate uses of this
    information?

44
Meta Questions
  • What would it mean for us as human beings?
  • Will human behavior change in light of the
    permanent record?
  • How will we substitute for forgetting if memory
    becomes perfect?
  • Would we become more empathetic if we can
    literally see other points of view?
  • Would resolving conflicts be just a matter of
    comparing recordings?
  • Would we create a class of people who live
    vicariously?
  • Would life be safer?
  • Is video/experience editing the next big growth
    industry?

45
Clues for Answers
  • Current usage in forms of
  • video surveillance,
  • credit histories, public records
  • policy on picture phones,
  • popularity of reality TV
  • use of web search to get background
  • Exploration in Art, movies that have touched the
    themes
  • Being John Malkovich, After Life, Slacker

46
Conclusions
  • Scientists and engineers create the intellectual
    and physical building blocks Artists imagine the
    possibilities, but
  • It is the interplay of Society and Culture that
    shape the actual usage and norms
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