BubbleFeed: Visualizing RSS Information in Public Spaces

Public interaction displays contribute to upgrading the quality of public spaces since they attract many users and stimulate social interaction. In this paper, BubbleFeed is presented, a system for visualizing RSS news from multiple sources in public spaces. RSS news headlines are displayed inside virtual interactive bubbles ascending from the bottom of a vertical screen to the top, resembling the bubbles formed in a glass of soft drink. Besides touching the bubbles to expand and read the respective news stories, playful user interaction is supported to promote better engagement and motivate multiple users to participate. To support custom news feeds and Facebook posts in addition to RSS feeds, we have built a tool and a library that produce RSS files from the respective sources. BubbleFeed also supports displaying weather information, hosting media galleries and providing useful information such as Wi-Fi hotspot maps.

[1]  Earl Rennison,et al.  Galaxy of news: an approach to visualizing and understanding expansive news landscapes , 1994, UIST '94.

[2]  Chris North,et al.  The Value of Information Visualization , 2008, Information Visualization.

[3]  Elizabeth F. Churchill,et al.  The Plasma Poster Network: Posting Multimedia Content in Public Places , 2003, INTERACT.

[4]  Marko Jurmu,et al.  From School Food to Skate Parks in a Few Clicks: Using Public Displays to Bootstrap Civic Engagement of the Young , 2012, Pervasive.

[5]  Giulio Jacucci,et al.  FizzyVis: designing for playful information browsing on a multitouch public display , 2011, DPPI.

[6]  Andy Darby,et al.  The Role of Playfulness and Sensory Experiences in Design for Public Health and for Ageing Well , 2017, Sensory Arts and Design.

[7]  Jodi Forlizzi,et al.  A spark of activity: exploring informative art as visualization for physical activity , 2012, UbiComp.

[8]  Lars Erik Holmquist,et al.  Between aesthetics and utility: designing ambient information visualizations , 2003, IEEE Symposium on Information Visualization 2003 (IEEE Cat. No.03TH8714).

[9]  Julie Rico Williamson,et al.  Enter the Circle: Blending Spherical Displays and Playful Embedded Interaction in Public Spaces , 2015, PerDis.

[10]  Antti Oulasvirta,et al.  It's Mine, Don't Touch!: interactions at a large multi-touch display in a city centre , 2008, CHI.

[11]  Saul Greenberg,et al.  The notification collage: posting information to public and personal displays , 2001, CHI.

[12]  Katsumi Tanaka,et al.  Using a sentiment map for visualizing credibility of news sites on the web , 2008, WICOW '08.

[13]  Elizabeth F. Churchill,et al.  The Plasma Poster Network , 2003 .

[14]  Judy Kay,et al.  Who cares about the Content? An Analysis of Playful Behaviour at a Public Display , 2014, PerDis.

[15]  Johan Redström,et al.  Informative art: using amplified artworks as information displays , 2000, DARE '00.

[16]  Michael S. Bernstein,et al.  Twitinfo: aggregating and visualizing microblogs for event exploration , 2011, CHI.

[17]  Yvonne Rogers,et al.  Enticing People to Interact with Large Public Displays in Public Spaces , 2003, INTERACT.

[18]  Alois Ferscha Informative Art Display Metaphors , 2007, HCI.

[19]  Anthony Tang,et al.  Designing for bystanders: reflections on building a public digital forum , 2008, CHI.

[20]  M. Sheelagh T. Carpendale,et al.  EMDialog: Bringing Information Visualization into the Museum , 2008, IEEE Transactions on Visualization and Computer Graphics.

[21]  Sokratis Kartakis,et al.  Classic Art for Modern People , 2011, HCI.