Quantcast
Channel: Search Results for “android”– Techlusive
Viewing all articles
Browse latest Browse all 18592

This app will help you learn a language while you wait for stuff to load on the internet

$
0
0
mobile-use-stock-image

Are you tired of a slow Wi-Fi connection hampering your social media life? Now you can utilize the idle time in enhancing your vocabulary with a new app. Researchers from Massachusetts Institute of Technology’s (MIT) Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory (CSAIL) have developed a series of apps called “WaitSuite” that test users on vocabulary words.

“WaitSuite is embedded directly into your existing tasks, so that you can easily learn without leaving what you were already doing,” said Carrie Cai, a PhD student who leads the project in a statement. ”With stand-alone apps, it can be inconvenient to have to separately open them up to do a learning task,” Cai added.

Among WaitSuite’s apps include “WiFiLearner” which gives users a learning prompt when it detects that their computer is seeking a WiFi connection. Meanwhile, “ElevatorLearner” automatically detects when a person is near an elevator by sensing Bluetooth iBeacons and then sends users a vocabulary word to translate.

“WaitSuite” covers five common daily tasks: waiting for Wi-Fi to connect, emails to push through, instant messages to be received, an elevator to come or content on your phone to load. ”When using the system’s instant messaging app ‘WaitChatter’, users learnt about four new words per day, or 57 words over just two weeks, the researchers said. ”WaitSuite” was developed in collaboration with MIT professor Rob Miller and former MIT student Anji Ren. ALSO READ: New Wi-Fi chipset bug puts iOS, Android devices at hacking risk

The team hopes to test other formats for micro-learning, like audio for on-the-go users. They even picture having the app remind users to practice mindfulness to avoid reaching for our phones in moments of impatience, boredom or frustration. A paper on the system is expected to be presented at ACM’s CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems in Colorado in May.


Viewing all articles
Browse latest Browse all 18592

Trending Articles