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Clemens Nylandsted Klokmose

Researcher at Aarhus University

Publications -  76
Citations -  1536

Clemens Nylandsted Klokmose is an academic researcher from Aarhus University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Computer science & Software. The author has an hindex of 17, co-authored 67 publications receiving 1042 citations. Previous affiliations of Clemens Nylandsted Klokmose include University of Paris-Sud.

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Proceedings ArticleDOI

Cross-Device Taxonomy: Survey, Opportunities and Challenges of Interactions Spanning Across Multiple Devices

TL;DR: An analysis and taxonomy of a corpus of 510 papers in the cross-device computing domain is contributed to create a unified terminology and common understanding for researchers in order to facilitate and stimulate future cross- device research.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Webstrates: Shareable Dynamic Media

TL;DR: This work revisits Alan Kay's early vision of dynamic media that blurs the distinction between documents and applications and presents Webstrates, an environment for exploring shareable dynamicMedia, which turns web pages into substrates, i.e. software entities that act as applications or documents depending upon use.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Dynamics in artifact ecologies

TL;DR: Through interviews with iPhone users, it is demonstrated that relationships between artifacts in artifact ecologies cannot be understood as static, instead they evolve dynamically over time.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Shared substance: developing flexible multi-surface applications

TL;DR: The finding is that the combination of a data-oriented programming model with middleware support for sharing data and functionality provides a flexible, robust solution with low viscosity at both design-time and run-time.
Journal ArticleDOI

Multisurface Interaction in the WILD Room

TL;DR: The WILD (wall-sized interaction with large datasets) room serves as a testbed for exploring the next generation of interactive systems by distributing interaction across diverse computing devices, enabling multiple users to easily and seamlessly create, share, and manipulate digital content.