אירועים
אירועים והרצאות בפקולטה למדעי המחשב ע"ש הנרי ומרילין טאוב
יום שלישי, 09.07.2013, 14:30
חדר 337, בניין טאוב למדעי המחשב
The recent introduction of the Apple iPhone 5 and the accompanying
iOS6 software environment which, among other changes, replaced the use of
a mapping App based on Google's map data with one that makes use of
Apple's map data, as well as changing the decisions as to what data is
displayed (served to the user) in responses to queries (especially
implicit ones through the manipulation of the viewing window),
has led to significant changes in the user experience with apps that
make use of map data and has resulted in closer scrutiny of mapping
applications on mobile devices. Many of these changes in the user
experience deal with the quality of the data that is being produced
and presented to the user, and has led to a wide ranging discussion of
data quality and the seeming lack of use of quality assurance policies
and protocols by Apple. These are widely documented in web postings,
and have generally been fixed soon after being disclosed. However,
equally important are significant changes in the manner in which, and
the amount and nature of, the data that is presented to the user, but,
surprisingly, not much attention has been paid to this aspect of the
user experience which is somewhat analogous to the concept of the
``last mile'' when discussing the bandwidth of communications networks
and its associated costs. The changes in the presentation and in the
amount of data that is presented to the user on the Apple iOS platform
(using the iOS6 Apple Maps App and the iOS5 Google Maps App), with an
emphasis on mobile devices with a small form factor such as
smartphones, are tabulated and compared along with other mapping Apps
such as the iOS apps of Bing, Nokia (called HERE Maps), ESRI (called
ArcGIS), MapQuest, OpenStreetMap (whose open source map data forms the
basis of OpenSeaMap which is used here), and a new one from Google
(termed iOS Google Maps) which was designed as a means to enable the
use of the Google map data in iOS (both iOS5 and iOS6). We also
compare these apps on the Apple iOS platform with the Google Maps App
on the Android platform.
* Best Paper Award, 1st ACM SIGSPATIAL International Workshop on
Mobile Geographic Information Systems (MobiGIS 2012), Redondo Beach,
CA, November 2012. PART OF THE ACM DISTINGUISHED SPEAKER PROGRAM
** Joint work with Brendan C. Fruin and Sarana Nutanong
Biography:
Hanan Samet (http://www.cs.umd.edu/~hjs/) is a Distinguished
University Professor of Computer Science at the University of
Maryland, College Park and is a member of the Institute for Computer
Studies. He is also a member of the Computer Vision Laboratory at the
Center for Automation Research where he leads a number of research
projects on the use of hierarchical data structures for database
applications involving spatial data. He has a Ph.D from Stanford
University. His doctoral dissertation dealt with proving the
correctness of translations of LISP programs which was the first work
in translation validation and the related concept of proof carrying
code. He is the author of the recent book "Foundations of
Multidimensional and Metric Data Structures" published by
Morgan-Kaufmann, San Francisco, CA, in 2006
(http://www.mkp.com/multidimensional), an award winner in the 2006
best book in Computer and Information Science competition of the
Professional and Scholarly Publishers (PSP) Group of the American
Publishers Association (AAP), and of the first two books on spatial
data structures titled "Design and Analysis of Spatial Data
Structures" and "Applications of Spatial Data Structures: Computer
Graphics, Image Processing and GIS" published by Addison-Wesley,
Reading, MA, 1990. He is the Founding Editor-In-Chief of the ACM
Transactions on Spatial Algorithms and System (TSAS), the founding
chair of ACM SIGSPATIAL, a recipient of the 2009 UCGIS Research Award,
2011 ACM Paris Kanellakis Theory and Practice Award, the 2010 CMPS
Board of Visitors Award at the University of Maryland, a Fellow of the
ACM, IEEE, AAAS, and IAPR (International Association for Pattern
Recognition), and an ACM Distinguished Speaker. He received best
paper awards in the 2008 SIGMOD Conference and the 2008 SIGSPATIAL
ACMGIS'08 Conference, and a best demo award at the 2011 SIGSPATIAL
ACMGIS'11 Conference. His paper at the 2009 IEEE International
Conference on Data Engineering (ICDE) was selected as one of the best
papers for publication in the IEEE Transactions on Knowledge and Data
Engineering.