Hi All,

We have a quick location update - the talk today will be at MaRS in the multi-purpose room on the main floor, not in the basement auditorium.

Thanks,
Tovi


On Oct 22, 2015, at 10:42 AM, Tovi Grossman <Tovi.Grossman@autodesk.com> wrote:

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Hello TUX!

 

A reminder that next week we will have a member presentation by Prof. Steve Mann. The details of the talk are below. Please note that his talk will be at MaRS, not at U of T. Some other important announcements:

 

1)      Our website is live at: http://www.tux-hci.org/

2)      We are looking for a volunteer to help with the website – please let us know if you’d like to get involved.

3)      We have set up a Google Calendar that you can import into your email client. The address for the calendar is:

https://calendar.google.com/calendar/ical/un3lidp8potad9jqb66c3i942g%40group.calendar.google.com/private-992bc11c5b02b6a3aa8b61dd6628208b/basic.ics

Most email clients will allow you to import an “internet” calendar so that you can view its events. For example, in Outlook right click “My Calendars”, select “Add Calendar” -> “>From Internet” and then paste in the above URL.

 

We look forward to seeing you next week!

Ali, Daniel, and Tovi

Tuesday, October 27 at 12:30pm, Tux Proudly Presents: Prof. Steve Mann

The MaRS Discovery District Auditorium @ 101 College St. (Lower Level)

Lunch reception begins at 12:30pm. Presentation begins at 1pm.

 

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Steve Mann:

41 Years of Wearable Augmented Reality as a Natural User Interface: The Past, Present, and Future of Phenomenal Augmented Reality

 

Steve Mann, Father of Wearable Computing, and founder of Wearable Computing as a discipline. Steve Mann is widely regarded as “The Father of Wearable Computing” [IEEE ISSCC 2000]. His work as an artist, scientist, designer, and inventor made Toronto the world’s epicentre of wearable technologies back in the 1980s. In 1992 Mann took this invention from Toronto to Massachusetts Institute of Technology, founding the MIT Media Lab’s Wearable Computing project as its first member. In the words of the Lab’s founding Director, Nicholas Negroponte: Steve Mann is the perfect example of someone… who persisted in his vision and ended up founding a new discipline.

 

Mann also invented the smartwatch videophone (wearable computer) in 1998, which was featured on the cover of Linux Journal in 2000, and presented at IEEE ISSCC2000, 2000 February 7, where he was named “The Father of Wearable Computing”. To this day, Toronto remains an international hotbed for the development of wearable technologies.

 

Some of Mann’s other inventions include HDR (High Dynamic Range) Imaging, now used in nearly every commercially manufactured camera, and the EyeTap Digital Eye Glass which predates the Google Glass by 30 years. Now as the Chief Scientist at Meta, a California-based startup, wearable AR glasses will be brought to a mass market. Recently, Steve and his team successfully raised US$23 million in funding to support Meta’s Spacesglasses.

 

Mann has often been described as a modern-day Leonardo daVinci:

 

“Steve Mann has been likened to artist, scientist, and inventor Leonardo da Vinci, …. He creates overlapping and inextricably intertwined syntheses of interventions and inventions that combine design, art, science, technology, engineering, and the environment….”

— Ariel Garten, CEO, InteraXon

 

“In Professor Steve Mann — inventor, physicist, engineer, mathematician, scientist, designer, developer, project director, filmmaker, artist, instrumentalist, author, photographer, actor, activist — we see so much of the paradigmatic classical Greek philosopher. … Steve has always been preoccupied by the application of his ideas into form. In this way too, he can be considered a modern day Leonardo Da Vinci.”

— K. Michael, Editor-in-Chief, IEEE Technology and Society

 

Steve received his PhD from MIT in 1997 and then returned to Toronto in 1998 where he is now a tenured full professor at the University of Toronto in the Electrical Engineering and Computer Science departments. During his early years at U of T, he created the world’s first Mobile Apps Lab (1999) as a part of his wearable computing and AR course. He is also the Chief Scientist at the Creative Destruction Lab at Rotman’s School of Management. Mann holds multiple patents, and has contributed to the founding of numerous companies including InteraXON, makers of Muse, “The Most Important Wearable of 2014”.

 

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OUR SPONSORS:

 

TUX is made possible by the support of our sponsors, Steven Sanders, Autodesk,

University of Toronto Department of Computer Science, and MaRS.

 

About MaRS: MaRS is the one of the world’s largest urban innovation hubs—a place for collaboration, creativity and entrepreneurship. Located in the heart of Toronto’s research district, MaRS provides the space, training, talent and networks required to commercialize important discoveries and launch and grow Canadian startups.

 

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