All, Can anyone recommend to me to high quality ethnographies of people using tablet computers? I've searched the list archives and we recently veered close to this subject in a thread discussing "Writing and iPads" but not close enough. In that thread, Shane Tilton shared a link to a poster about an ethnographic study of tablet usage on campus buses (https://www.ideals.illinois.edu/bitstream/handle/2142/25041/hahn_rapid.pdf?s...). I've also found references to an Australian study (http://works.bepress.com/jeff_brand/18/) but nearly all of the material I've found so far focuses on the use of tablets as tools to conduct ethnographies. So are there any studies out there I'm missing? Does anyone have anything in the pipeline? (For the curious and those who need more context, this relates to a study for which I've previously asked for help related to mobile devices and web surveys. I'm presenting a paper in a few months showing that in this one study respondents to a web-based survey who used mobile phones provided lower-quality responses compared to iPad and computer users. My methods don't allow me to say *why* this happened but I'd like to conjecture intelligently and offer some likely possibilities hence my desire to know how people use tablets. My hunch is that this relates to screen size and environmental factors.) Kevin