KMi News

First OU App release into iTunes

First OU App release into iTunes

Today saw the first release of an OU App for iPhone and iPod Touch from our Marketing Department into the Apple App store. Apple’s online location for mobile applications has proved very popular, with over two billion downloads of over a hundred thousand apps; so we will not get too excited about our ability to impact this particular channel. On the other hand, we are right to get excited by the ability of our fantastic team to plug in some very cool educational thinking into new and emerging platforms.

According to Paul Hogan from KMi’s Mobile Innovation Group, "this release flags the start of an exciting process into 2010. We are currently working on a set of new concept teaching Apps with OU faculty. Watch this space in the new year, and get your iPhone ready!".

This first App was produced by the OU Marketing team to promote the 2009 celebrations that mark the 200th Anniversary of Charles Darwin’s birth and the 150th Anniversary of his book ‘On the Origin of Species’. The Darwin website has a very nice online version (using Flash) of this application that connects with some simple and fun concepts and helps you learn more about Darwin’s theory of evolution. Like the website version the App for Apple’s store is free to download, and points back to the University to lead the curious towards a learning journey with us.

The App makes good use of the built in mobile camera, so that it is very quick and easy to see yourself and your friends though the eyes of an ‘early hominid’. Maybe it will make you want to find out more about who ‘Homo Habilis’ really was!

Related Links:


KMi News Image 0
KMi News Image 1


KMi @ SAMT 2009

KMi @ SAMT 2009

Three members of KMi attended the 4th International Conference on Semantic and Digital Media Technologies (SAMT) in Graz in Dec 2009. SAMT 2009 targetted narrowing the so-called semantic gap, that is, the large disparity between the low-level descriptors that can be computed automatically from multimedia content and the high-level semantic meaning of the multimedia that users target in their queries and interactions.

KMi participation covered all possible aspects of the conference from attending the Christmas market and poster session covered by Ainhoa Llorente, followed by a full paper presented by Neil Benn (on behalf of Stefan Dietze) and the keynote talk "More than a thousand words" by Stefan Rueger that closed the conference with an in-depth analysis of the state of the art in image and video retrieval.

Rueger’s talk covered the research of KMi’s Multimedia and Information Systems team on automated annotating images from pixels and ideas how to incorporate external world knowledge. The second part of Rueger’s talk demonsrated how users can be roped into the resource discovery process by providing a browsing infrastructure that makes a multimedia repository a "small world" in which any two images are reachable – on average – by 3 to 4 navigation clicks in the network.

KMi Papers

Next year’s conference is going to be held in Saarbr&uul;cken, Germany, and no prizes for predicting KMi’s active involvement there!

Related Links:


Future Internet in Stockholm

Future Internet in Stockholm

The beginning of this week saw over 350 Future Internet stakeholders from academia, government and industry meet with the Kista Science City in Stockholm. This meeting, part of the series of six-monthly Future Internet Assemblies, enables the leaders of over a hundred EU projects representing a budget approaching 500M Euros to collaborate on key issues associated with the creation of a new global network infrastructure. This meeting focused on a number of cross domain themes including: architectures and business models; identity management; trust; orchestration across networks, things, services and content; smart cities; discovery and search in the Future Internet; enterprises and large scale experimentation. The Future Internet continues to be a core theme of European ICT research. For example, it now accounts for 20% of the overall EU ICT workprogramme budget with an extra 300M Euros recently announced for a Public Private Partnership on the Future Internet. Industrial interest is also extremely high – the closing speaker at this event was Hakan Eriksson Senior Vice President and Chief Technology Officer of Ericsson and SAP have just announced that their International Research Forum for 2010 will be entitled �The Future Internet: Right Here, Right Now�. KMi�s involvement in the Future Internet initiative incorporates the leadership of Future Internet projects including SOA4All and Service Web 3.0, and the chairing of sessions (discovery and search) and of the software and services working group. The next Future Internet Assembly will take place in Valencia in Spring 2010.

Wolfram Research presents Wolfram|Alpha

Wolfram Research presents Wolfram|Alpha