The Travel Book (tentative name)
Group Members
- Sarah Cheng, s_cheng@mit.edu
- Ilia Lebedev, ilebedev@csail.mit.edu
- Jennifer Wong, jenlwong@mit.edu
- TA: Juho Kim, juhokim@mit.edu
Problem Statement
Travelers can record their trips in many ways. For example, they can keep a collection of photos sorted by day, update a journal, or both. Some travelers will decide to share this information with their friends through websites such as Facebook or LiveJournal. However, this sharing method requires the traveler to make an active decision to sit down and do an update. Often, they forget to do so, or are unable to find an internet connection, and their traveling experiences may not be posted for a long time. As a consequence, interested friends or family members would not be updated on the traveler's adventures.
Even for travelers who have no intention of sharing, the action of updating a personal record is often procrastinated, due to the necessary conscious effort to find time.
A Solution
The Travel Book is a mobile application that provides the ability to:
- quickly post new photos and short lines of text via a phone
- maintain a "timeline", or a chronologically-ordered record, of your travels (for either sharing or private use)
- share posts through Facebook with a single button press
As cameras on phones are getting better and better, more travelers are relying on their phones to take photos. The Travel Book allows travelers to make journal entries with these photos instantly, wherever they happen to be on their trips. The entries will be added to their timelines, ready to share with friends and family via Facebook.
2 Comments
Unknown User (juhokim@mit.edu)
GR5 comment
"Presentation
: Nice explanation of design decisions and implementation details
Usability: Love the arrow drawing, and nice design changes made since GR4. The design of individual entries is a bit coarse. Color-coded vertical bars overlap with text.
Answers to our questions: Significant improvements, and well-justified decisions.
"
Ilia A Lebedev
Thanks for the feedback! I really enjoyed the class overall.
The vertical bar overlap was a surprise to us too. It happens on screens with resolution below 160dp, which shouldn't be a problem for most phones.