Place-based Computing

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About the Project

The convergence of handheld computing devices and GPS receivers makes it possible to augment any place with layers of digital information. This is place-based computing. It has the potential to radically change the way that we experience places and understand the past.

All of our research projects start from the premise that places are archives, and that by studying places it is possible to reconstruct past events. Some of this work is archival in a traditional sense, and builds on work in microhistory, the history of science and environmental history. Some is methodological, aimed at developing new techniques for extracting information from representations of places or from places themselves. Some is public history, designed to be presented to the public in the places that are being interpreted.

The Place-Based Computing initiative at The University of Western Ontario was established in 2005 to support interdisciplinary research on technologically-augmented experiences of place, and to develop new locative methods for teaching history, geography, and related disciplines. We work closely with the [WWW]Public History program, with [WWW]Jason Gilliland’s [WWW]Imag(in)ing London group, and with members of the community.

Erle, Schuyler, Rich Gibson and Jo Walsh. Mapping Hacks: Tips and Tools for Electronic Cartography (Sebastopol, CA: O’Reilly, 2005):

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