Papers due: Wednesday, September 23, 2009 Submit paper by email to Richard J. Nelson with HHC PAPER as the email subject. Topics Papers in previous HHC Proceedings have been primarily about: Techniques (hardware, software, and implementation issues) System design Specific applications (from serious work to leisurely pastimes) Evaluation of HP designs Emulators Collectors’ information. In general, papers may be about anything of interest to enthusiasts of programmable handheld computing devices especially (but not exclusively) those made by Hewlett Packard. Paper Format See the “HHC 2009 Paper Format Example” for complete details. Paper Length There is no limit to paper length, but a paper will be rejected by the Committee if its concept-per-page ratio is too low, which would be a first in HHC history. Color The Conference Proceedings are photocopied in black and white. If your paper contains any color pages, then you must, at your own expense, produce enough copies of those pages for inclusion in every copy of the Proceedings, and bring them to the Conference room early enough to insert them yourself. Review Process Papers are peer-reviewed by the Conference Committee. Please note that no paper has ever been edited or rejected for any of our past conferences. All papers submitted to HHC 2009 should be original, unpublished work. Copyrights to others must be respected. Submissions are treated as confidential communications during the review process, so submission does not constitute public disclosure of any ideas therein. Submissions should contain no information or materials that will be proprietary or confidential at the time of publication (October 3, 2009), and should cite no publications that are proprietary or confidential at the time of publication.
Submit paper by email to Richard J. Nelson with HHC PAPER as the email subject.
All papers submitted to HHC 2009 should be original, unpublished work. Copyrights to others must be respected.
Submissions are treated as confidential communications during the review process, so submission does not constitute public disclosure of any ideas therein. Submissions should contain no information or materials that will be proprietary or confidential at the time of publication (October 3, 2009), and should cite no publications that are proprietary or confidential at the time of publication.