Demonstrations

Demonstrations provide an opportunity to present a hands-on demonstration of your work, research, service, prototype or product addressing one or more of the suggested topics as presented in the general call for participation.

Demonstration submissions should have a maximum of four pages (including figures) and they should be accompanied by a one page specification of the infrastructural requirements. By default, one table, two chairs, one poster board with enough space left for one A0-sized poster in portrait orientation, 220-230V 50Hz power, and internet connectivity (both fixed Ethernet and Wi-Fi) are available. Please specify which of these default facilities you intend to use and whether you have additional wishes . The Demonstrations Chair will investigate infrastructure and equipment possibilities for the accepted demonstrations.

Participants are expected to bring the necessary equipment to the conference site with them. Demonstrations will be presented during the conference.


Authors are also required to prepare a one minute PowerPoint presentation for the Madness Session and submit it to the Posters' chair until September 15 March 2011.


Extended abstract will be published in the conference proceedings.

Important Dates

  • Submission deadline: 15 Jan 2011
  • Acceptance notification: 10 Feb 2011 28 Feb 2011
  • Final version deadline: 28 Feb 2011 04 March 2011

Submission Process

To submit a paper, follow the following steps:

  • Create an account on www.easychair.org. (This itself is a 4-step process - a short form, email address verification, a longer form and login.)
  • Come back to this page and click here. Click on "New Submission" menu, and fill in your paper details.

  • OR Send your material at submissions@indiahci2011.in

Co-Chairs

Atul Manohar

Girish Dalvi

Girish Dalvi graduated in Computer Engineering from the University of Pune; and completed his post graduation in New Media Design from the National Institute of Design, Ahmedabad. Following this he joined Yahoo! and worked on web based Indian Language projects. Presently he is a teaching assistant at the Industrial Design Centre and visiting faculty at the Tata Institute of Social Sciences. Since 2006 he is pursuing his doctoral research at the Industrial Design Centre in the Indian Institute of Technology Bombay. His areas of focus in research include history and ontology of Devanāgarī typefaces, Typeface Design, Indian Language Computing, and Classification Theories.

 

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