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The Curious Case of the “Smart” Home

IxDA Pittsburgh is proud to present this thought provoking talk that looks into the not-so-distant future of truly smart environments. The virtual “doors” open at 5:45, and the talk starts at 6:00.

About the Talk

Truly smart and responsive environments rely on the ability to detect physical events and social context, such as appliance use and human activities. Currently, to sense these types of events, one must either upgrade to “smart” appliances or attach aftermarket sensors to existing objects and infrastructure. These approaches are expensive, intrusive and inflexible. Furthermore, even “smart” appliances are often very dumb—a smart speaker sitting on a kitchen countertop cannot figure out if it is in a kitchen, let alone know the user is preparing dinner. In my talk, I will review key breakthroughs my group has made over the past five years to bring the promise of smart environments much closer to reality.

About Chris

Chris Harrison is an Associate Professor of Human-Computer Interaction at Carnegie Mellon University. Dr. Harrison leads the Future Interfaces Group (www.figlab.com), broadly investigating novel sensing and interactive technologies. Dr. Harrison has authored more than 90 peer-reviewed papers, and his work appears in more than 40 books. For his innovations, Harrison has been named as a Top 35 Innovator by MIT Technology Review, a Top 30 Scientist by Forbes, and a World Economic Forum Young Scientist. Harrison has also been named a fellow by the Packard Foundation, Sloan Foundation, Google, Qualcomm and Microsoft Research. He is also co-founder and CTO of Qeexo, a CMU spinoff working at the intersection of interactive technologies and artificial intelligence. His website is www.chrisharrison.net.

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