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No cure for curiosity
Author(s) -
Jan Seeburger
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
qut eprints (queensland university of technology)
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
DOI - 10.1145/2399016.2399054
Subject(s) - curiosity , computer science , software deployment , set (abstract data type) , mobile phone , internet privacy , world wide web , public space , phone , human–computer interaction , exploratory research , space (punctuation) , multimedia , telecommunications , engineering , sociology , psychology , architectural engineering , social psychology , linguistics , philosophy , anthropology , programming language , operating system
Although mobile phones are often used in public urban places to interact with one’s geographically dispersed social circle, they can also facilitate interactions with people in the same public urban space. The PlaceTagz study investigates how physical artefacts in public urban places can be utilised and combined with mobile phone technologies to facilitate interactions. Printed on stickers, PlaceTagz are QR codes linking to a digital message board enabling collocated users to interact with each other over time resulting in a place-based digital memory. This exploratory project set out to investigate if and how PlaceTagz are used by urban dwellers in a real world deployment. We present findings from analysing content received through PlaceTagz and interview data from application users. QR codes, which do not contain any contextual information, piqued the curiosity of users wondering about the embedded link’s destination and provoked comments in regards to people, place and technology

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