Title: In(k)formation
1In(k)formation
- Mudit Agrawal
- Class Info-centric design of Systems
- Spring 07
2 Motivation
- With the digital age, is it possible to
revolutionize publishing? - Will paper be still around after 10 years as the
chief source of ink or printed information? - If not, how and where will our ink-information be
stored? - If yes, will it be any different?
3Contents
- Information storage media
- Paper Industry
- Electronic Paper
- Digital Paper
- Stylus and Digital Pens
- Applications
- Proposal for digital-exam!
4Information Storage
- Old Storage media
- simple,
- low capacity
- difficult to duplicate
- difficult to distribute
- Todays digital environment
- huge storage capacities
- simple distribution.
- Natures storage media
- Tree rings - analog representation of the
patterns of flood and drought. - Crystal structures - representing patterns and
arrangements of atoms and molecules. - DNA, digital encoding of information in patterns
of genes and proteins.
petroglyphs
5Digital Age
- Data is stored all around you
- On
- floppy disks,
- barcodes,
- identification and bankcards.
- Data can be in many forms
- identification numbers,
- photographs,
- computer files,
- audio and videotape,
- CD-ROMs
- DVD-ROMs
6Still!
- A recent estimate of information storage
estimated 1 is stored in recordable media such
as disk drives and CD-ROM, 4 in photographic
microfilm and fiche, and 95 on paper.
7Statistics!
- A tree can produce about 80,500 sheets of paper
- It requires about 786 million trees to produce
the world's annual paper supply -
8Paper!
- Printed Paper is
- Cheap,
- Cheerful,
- Ubiquitous
- It's The Bedrock Of A Billion-Dollar Global
Industry - Why paper still?
- Of course, because paper has entrenched
advantages. - tangibility pretty much everyone prefers paper
to screens. - You can carry it around
- it's compact,
- it's convenient
- doesn't break.
- It doesn't need outside power.
- totally reliable.
- In other words, it's everything a laptop computer
is not.
9Traditional Paper ?
- Inspite of all these added advantages,
conventional paper lacks - Fast and efficient search
- Reusability
- Piles!
10 11-
- Electronic Paper
- And
- Digital Paper
12Electronic Paper
- Mimics appearance of regular ink on paper
- Doesnt use backlight to illuminate pixels
- Reflects light like ordinary paper
- Bistable
13Electronic Paper (continued)
- Intelligent Paper
- First developed in the 1970s by Nick Sheridon at
Xerox's Palo Alto Research Center. - Gyricon first electronic paper
- Concept from Dot-matrix printer words and
pictures can be broken into dots or pixels
14Electronic Paper (continued)
- Contained polyethylene spheres between 20 and 100
micrometres across. - Each sphere is composed of
- negatively charged black plastic on one side and
- positively charged white plastic on the other
- each bead is thus a dipole.
- The spheres are embedded in a transparent
silicone sheet, with each sphere suspended in a
bubble of oil so that they can rotate freely.
15Electronic Paper (continued)
- The polarity of the voltage applied to each pair
of electrodes then determines whether the white
or black side is face-up, thus giving the pixel a
white or black appearance. - Negative charge to electrode ? black pixel
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18Applications
- Phillips and Sony developing commercial
applications. - Shipped developer kits of 6 inch, 800x600
resolution electronic paper on November 1, 2005. - In February 2006, the Flemish daily De Tijd
distributed an electronic-ink version of the
paper
19Applications (continued)
- Flexible display cards enable generation of a
one-time password to reduce online banking and
transaction fraud. - Compared with existing key fob tokens, display
cards offer a flat and thin alternative to
existing key fob tokens for data security. - Motorola's new style mobile phone, called the
Motofone, also uses a monochrome electronic paper
screen
20- Are we missing something?
?
21Digital Paper and Pen
- Motivation Handwriting!
- Need for an interactive paper
- Precursors
- Wacom Tablet
- Pegasus Pen
22Wacom Tablet
23Wacom Tablet
- cordless, battery-free and pressure-sensitive
pens - uses a patented electromagnetic resonance
technology - tablet provides power to the pen through resonant
coupling - A grid of wires that transmits a send and receive
signal
24Application GKB
25Wacom ? GKB ? Details
26Wacom ? GKB ? Details
The channel mode of the gesture keyboard.
In (a), the gestures are of same shape but spaced
out in different (x,y) coordinates whereas, in
(b), the gestures occur in same space but
separated in the shape dimension.
27Pegasus Pen
28Digital Paper and Pen
- Anoto!
- Paper
- with proprietary patterns of dots printed on it.
- each dot is spaced about 0.3mm apart
- the full pattern consists of 669,845,157,115,773,4
58,169 dots - encompasses an area exceeding 4.6 million km²
- this corresponds to 73 trillion sheets of
letter-size paper.
29Pattern
30Anoto Pen
31Process
- The digital pen takes digital snapshots of the
pattern - A calculation of the exact position of the
digital pen is made - Possible to retrieve
- what has been written with the digital pen and
- where on the paper this was written.
32The system
- Other Pens
- Logitech IO pen
- Magicomm G303
- Maxell digital pen
- Nokia SU-1B pen
33Implications!
- Media of storage reversed!
- Pen stores the data, not paper
- Move around with your pen, and dock in, to
transfer the data wherever you want!
34ApplicationsPaper Presentation Tool
for giving PowerPoint presentations controlled by
a paper-based user interface
35ApplicationsEncyclopedia
combining printed information with content
delivered on a CD-ROM
36ApplicationsSemi-digital City Map
providing supplementary digital information about
restaurants, cinemas, shopping facilities etc
37ApplicationsScientific Annotations
publication annotation application was designed
to support researchers in their annotations,
recommendations and cross-referencing of
articles
38ApplicationsPrint-n-Link
Print-n-Link uses technologies for interactive
paper to enhance the reading process by enabling
users to access digital information and/or
searches for cited documents from a printed
version of a publication
39ApplicationsLaboratory Notebooks
- Research lab notebooks are pocket books for
documenting scientific experiments - Click and search for related field
- Match the results
40ApplicationHandwriting Recognition!
- Process
- Smoothing
- De-hooking
- Normalization
- Ink vector interpolation in spatial domain (from
temporal) - Training a classifier for simple generic shapes
- Pre-processed ink for recognition
41ApplicationsOthers
- Ambulance
- X-ray annotations
- Doctor e-diagnosis
42Digital-Exam System Proposal
Prepare the versions Of Question paper
Associate Patterns with each version
Distribute papers to students
Answer matching Result generation
Distribute Pens to students
Examination
Dock and transfer the ink
43Gmail Paper!
- Google Paper is a new feature being promoted on
the Gmail home page. You can request a physical
copy of any email with the click of a button, and
Google will deliver paper printouts to you in 2-4
days via the mail.
1st APRIL ?
44References
- http//invsee.asu.edu/nmodules/ismmod/intro.html
- http//www2.sims.berkeley.edu/research/projects/ho
w-much-info-2003/print.htm - http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electronic_paper
- http//www.sipix.com/technology/index.html
- http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wacom
- http//www.wired.com/wired/archive/5.05/ff_digital
ink_pr.html - http//www.eetindia.com8088/ARTICLES/2006AUG/C/20
06AUG28_INDIADESIGNS_HPLabsIndia.HTM - Kauranen(o.J.) The ANOTO pen - Why light
scattering matters. IZMF (2004) - http//www.globis.ethz.ch/research/paper/applicati
ons