• On The Insider: Judge Bans Real Housewives Sex Tape
July 29, 2008 6:00 AM PDT

IBM mobile software helps 'senior moments'

by Stefanie Olsen

You don't have to be older than 60 to have a "senior moment" in today's information-overloaded culture. So technologists are working on software that could one day help jog the memory despite your age.

For the past two years, IBM researchers have been developing technology to help people recall events, names of new acquaintances, and details of a conversation in their context with the use of cell phone and computer. On Tuesday, IBM Research Labs plans to publicize an early version of its personal-assistant software, called "Pensieve," after the fictional memory bank described in Harry Potter books. IBM posted a video on YouTube.

Not available publicly yet, the software could feasibly be used with any mobile smart phone. The technology relies on people keeping track of what's important to them by using the phone to snap photos, create text documents, or record audio. When the phone is synced to a computer via a Pensieve-enabled dock, the software takes over. It collates files by their tagged GPS location and time, among other rules, and creates associations between them.

"As it processes the information, it's building an associative network of people and places and events," said Laura Haas, director of computer science at the IBM Research Center in San Jose, Calif.

For example, if a person takes a photo of an event poster, the software's optical character recognition technology would take down the details of the event and make a calendar entry. Or if a person takes a photo of someone new at a business workshop, followed by a picture of his or her business card, Pensieve might create an address book entry that's linked to the photo and notes taken at the workshop. Later, when the person tries to remember the name of new acquaintance, he or she could use Pensieve's search engine to recall data from the workshop.

"If I'm trying to remember the name of this interesting person, maybe all I remember is that I met them at Google, I would search for 'person at Google' and it would show my contacts from there and start jogging my memory," Haas said.

The project began as part of an annual competition within IBM's Research Labs, which calls on engineers to submit creative ideas for tech projects. The project received so-called "blue money," or development funding.

For now, the technology relies heavily on photos or text that are captured on a cell phone, thanks to IBM's work in optical character recognition and information retrieval. But IBM researchers eventually plan to add sound capture on the same device, when more mobile gadgets provide audio recording tools.

IBM is also now starting to look for technology partners, such as cell phone manufacturers or mobile software companies, to develop it into a working product, Haas said.

"It's an evolution of smarter and smarter PDAs," she said. "What makes this special, and why I think it will be successful, is that it's purposeful. If you're capturing everything, then you're like our poor brains, and you can't process everything."

New IBM Research technology (a mockup shown here) is designed to be a virtual memory aide, organizing the who, what, when and where of all the information captured by your mobile device so you can search for it later.

(Credit: IBM Research Labs)
Recent posts from Digital Media
Wife exposes chief spy's personal life on Facebook
Seattle fire knocks out service to Bing Travel, other sites
DOJ opens formal investigation into Google Books settlement
Ad industry groups agree to privacy guidelines
Microsoft chucks vomit ad
Jammie Thomas will appeal, lawyer says
Usenet.com ruling, a 'whittling down' of Betamax defense
Microsoft resorts to vomit to market IE 8
Add a Comment (Log in or register) (3 Comments)
  • prev
  • 1
  • next
by repete_7 July 29, 2008 6:44 AM PDT
Evernote already does some of this. You can already take photos of business cards, poster, etc., email them to your Evernote account, and it will perform OCR on the photos making them searchable.
Reply to this comment
by Renegade Knight July 29, 2008 7:00 AM PDT
Evernote never worked like I wanted it to. IBM's version might. Of course Evernote has a good price.
by ghostofitpast July 29, 2008 8:08 AM PDT
I have written an extended grumble at:

http://therehearsalstudio.blogspot.com/2008/07/memory-reminders-and-wisdom.html
Reply to this comment
(3 Comments)
  • prev
  • 1
  • next
advertisement

Making sense of Windows 7 upgrades

faq The basics and the fine print on Microsoft's options for those eyeing the next operating system from Redmond.
• Full Windows 7 coverage

Road Trip 2009: Big Sky Country

CNET News reporter Daniel Terdiman takes his car full of gadgets to the Rockies and the Great Plains in search of tech, science, nature, and more.
• America's Fortress: Cheyenne Mountain

About Digital Media

The Web is now the place to go for news and entertainment. Look here for the latest on blogs, music, video, virtual worlds, social networking and more.

Add this feed to your online news reader

Digital Media topics

advertisement
advertisement

Inside CNET News

Scroll Left Scroll Right