default search action
3. CHINZ 2002: Hamilton, New Zealand
- Matt Jones, Steve Jones, Masood Masoodian:
Proceedings of the SIGCHI-NZ Symposium on Computer-Human Interaction, 11-12 July 2002, Hamilton, New Zealand. ACM 2002, ISBN 0-473-08500-3 - Harold Thimbleby:
Symmetry for successful interactive systems. 1-9 - Beryl Plimmer, Mark D. Apperley, Masood Masoodian:
FreeForm: an informal environment for interface prototyping. 11-12 - Giovanni S. Moretti, Paul J. Lyons:
Tools for the selection of colour palettes. 13-18 - Michael Moyle, Andy Cockburn:
Analysing mouse and pen flick gestures. 19-24 - Pippin Barr, Robert Biddle, James Noble:
A taxonomy of user-interface metaphors. 25-30 - Dayang Rohaya Awang Rambli, Roy S. Kalawsky:
The effect of display and image type on inter-object distance estimation in virtual and real environments. 31-36 - Shigeru Wesugi, Yoshiyuki Miwa:
Overlaying a virtual and a real table to create an inter-real virtual space. 37-42 - Elizabeth A. Kemp, Chris Phillips:
The high level design of object-oriented user interfaces: a review of methods. 43-48 - Candy Wong, Hao-Hua Chu, Masaji Katagiri:
GUI migration across heterogeneous Java profiles. 49-54 - Rilla Khaled, Daniel Mackay, Robert Biddle, James Noble, Ewan D. Tempero:
A lightweight web-based case tool for sequence diagrams. 55-60 - Sally Jo Cunningham:
Designing software for unusual users: the severely/profoundly intellectually handicapped. 61-66 - Dan Hawthorn:
Dealing with application complexity when designing for older users. 67-72 - Leena Eronen:
Design of interactive television programs. 73-78 - David Hamilton, David Hunt, Chris Knowles:
Designing an interface for supporting information visualisation in eLearning discussion forums. 79-84 - John Grundy, Weiguo Jin:
Experiences developing a thin-client, multi-device travel planning application. 85-90 - Andrew Golightly, Tony Smith:
An experimental speech to graphics system. 91-96 - Mark D. Apperley, Orion Edwards, Sam Jansen, Masood Masoodian, Sam McKoy, Bill Rogers, Tony Voyle, David Ware:
Application of imperfect speech recognition to navigation and editing of audio documents. 97-102 - Jon Labrie:
Sampling versus synthesis. 103
manage site settings
To protect your privacy, all features that rely on external API calls from your browser are turned off by default. You need to opt-in for them to become active. All settings here will be stored as cookies with your web browser. For more information see our F.A.Q.