Berkeley's CS160
- Taught by James Landay and Laurence Rowe over past 5-6 years. Good readings in user-centered design and prototyping procedures. With project descriptions. Focus is on designing Web applications.
"Information Appliances and Beyond," edited by Eric Bergman, Morgan-Kaufmann, 2000. Interviews with Don Norman and developers from Sun, Netpliance, Handspring, Psion, Nokia, and others.
"Modern Batteries: An Introduction to Electrochemical Power Sources, 2nd edition," edited by Colin A. Vincent and Bruno Scrosati. Good descriptions of the modern battery systems that are appropriate to today's appliances.
Journals:
IEEE Spectrum carries consistently interesting articles on technology directions, with detail and references to the original publications. Contents and highlights are available on the Web; articles can be viewed and downloaded if you are an IEEE member (which I recommend -- student memberships are very cheap). Three recent articles relevant to our interests are available on the course website:
Digital TV rollout - Good information. It presents the European point
of view that HDTV is overkill, and that Europe's DVB, already in use for
satellite TV around the world, is going to win. I suspect he's about 80%
correct, since there is a lot of politics still to be played.
Wireless data -- the mode of the future - This one's really for next
year's course. But see what Irwin Jacobs (founder, with Andy Viterbi, of
Qualcomm) thinks will help wires to go away.