Peter Kropf Ubiquitous Computing - Hiver 2006/20071 Peter Kropf Université de Neuchâtel Institut d’informatique Ubiquitous Computing Béat Hirsbrunner Université de Fribourg Département d’informatique Semestre d’hiver
Peter Kropf Ubiquitous Computing - Hiver 2006/20072 Introduction
Peter Kropf Ubiquitous Computing - Hiver 2006/20073 Ubiquitous Computing...
Peter Kropf Ubiquitous Computing - Hiver 2006/ means: ▶ The disappearing computer: from fixed to mobile to wearable ▶ It is about the Computer in the World and NOT the World in the Computer : bridging the gap between virtual and real world ▶ Context- and location-aware, diverse and numerous, human-centric ▶ Smart devices with spontaneous network capabilities that have access to any information or provide access to any service “on the net” ▶ Vision: everyday objects become smart and interconnected; they communicate and cooperate ▶ Much technology driven: Moore’s law Intel
Peter Kropf Ubiquitous Computing - Hiver 2006/20075 Ubiquitous computing ◆ Mark Weiser (1988) : Ubiquitous means “to be found everywhere” ◆ The Any notion : anywhere, anytime, any device, any person, any application ◆ The disappearing computer : Computer weave themselves into the fabric of everyday life until they are undistinguishable from it (Weiser)
Peter Kropf Ubiquitous Computing - Hiver 2006/20076 The Disappearing Computer 70+ computers
Peter Kropf Ubiquitous Computing - Hiver 2006/20077 The Disappearing Computer Disappearing by size Electronic label
Peter Kropf Ubiquitous Computing - Hiver 2006/20078 Mark Weiser : Ubiquitous Computing ◆ Mark Weiser’s (1991) vision : a vast amount of interconnected computers lying around and embedded everywhere ◆ “The Computer for the 21st Century”, published in Scientific American ◆ ”The most profound technologies are those that disappear.” ◆ “There is more information available at our fingertips during a walk in the woods than in any computer system, yet people find a walk among trees relaxing and computers frustrating. Machines that fit the human environment, instead of forcing humans to enter theirs, will make using a computer as refreshing as taking a walk in the woods”
Peter Kropf Ubiquitous Computing - Hiver 2006/20079 Mark Weiser : Ubiquitous Computing ◆ What’s his main message? ► Conceived of a new way of thinking about computers ► “Not just computers that can be carried to the beach, jungle or airport” ► Technologies disappear into the natural human environment ► Computers are seamlessly integrated into the world at large (For NBC video see
Peter Kropf Ubiquitous Computing - Hiver 2006/ The smart microwave oven
Peter Kropf Ubiquitous Computing - Hiver 2006/ Agriculture wireless monitoring
Peter Kropf Ubiquitous Computing - Hiver 2006/ Robot Cleaner
Peter Kropf Ubiquitous Computing - Hiver 2006/ Flexible PC, screen and map
Peter Kropf Ubiquitous Computing - Hiver 2006/ Smart glasses
Peter Kropf Ubiquitous Computing - Hiver 2006/ Trend
Peter Kropf Ubiquitous Computing - Hiver 2006/ A Business/Market Perspective © IBM The market is evolving from wired computing to pervasive computing, mobile and wireless
Peter Kropf Ubiquitous Computing - Hiver 2006/ Example : supermarket
Peter Kropf Ubiquitous Computing - Hiver 2006/ Example : transportation
Peter Kropf Ubiquitous Computing - Hiver 2006/ Enabling Technology : RFID devices What is a Radio-Frequency Identification (RFID) tag? Chip (IC) Antenna
Peter Kropf Ubiquitous Computing - Hiver 2006/ Ubiquitous/Pervasive Computing Processors, sensors, and wireless communication will be ubiquitous Integrated into everyday objects to render them „smart“