The sharing of digital materials within online communities has increased significantly in recent years. Our work focuses on promoting community information sharing in public spaces using large screen, interactive, digital poster boards called the Plasma Posters. In this chapter we first describe our fieldwork-led, iterative design process, and elaborate a number of design guidelines that resulted. Following this, the design and development of the Plasma Posters themselves and the underlying network infrastructure is discussed. Finally, we present results from qualitative and quantitative evaluations over the course of a ten-month deployment of three Plasma Posters within our own organization, a software research community made up of technologists and designers. We conclude with observations regarding ergonomic, social and other factors that were raised during the design and deployment and offer reflections on factors in the success of this deployment.
CITATION STYLE
Churchill, E., Nelson, L., Denoue, L., Murphy, P., & Helfman, J. (2003). The Plasma Poster Network. In Public and Situated Displays (pp. 233–260). Springer Netherlands. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-94-017-2813-3_10
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