The term ubiquitous computing has been used since the late 1980s, referring to the spread of computing into almost any device in any location, in the home and the workplace. It has …
M Weiser - Communications of the ACM, 1998 - dl.acm.org
We are about to enter the third wave of the computing revolution. University campuses have been at the forefront of each of these technology revolutions. The first wave constituted the …
R Want - Ubiquitous computing fundamentals, 2010 - api.taylorfrancis.com
Ubiquitous computing, or ubicomp, is the term given to the third era of modern computing. e first era was defined by the mainframe computer, a single large time-shared computer …
George H. Forman and John Zahorjan University of Washington ecent advances in technology have provided portable computers with wire-less interfaces that allow networked …
F Mattern - Proceedings of Wireless Congress, 2004 - vs.inf.ethz.ch
Over the last 30 years, we have seen the power of microprocessors double about every 18 months. An equally rapid increase applies to some other technological parameters such as …
J Sen - arXiv preprint arXiv:1011.1960, 2010 - researchgate.net
The world is witnessing the birth of a revolutionary computing paradigm that promises to have a profound effect on the way we interact with computers, devices, physical spaces, and …
M Weiser - ACM SIGMOBILE Mobile Computing and …, 1999 - dl.acm.org
U biquitous computing enhances computer use by making many computers available throughout the physical environment, while making them effectively invisible to the user. This …
J Scholtz - ACM SIGMOBILE Mobile Computing and …, 2001 - dl.acm.org
In the late 80's and early 90's Mark Weiser published a vision for the next generation of computing which he termed ubiquitous computing. In the last few years a number of …