The Future of Mobile Computing Mark Frydenberg CIS Department
What is Mobile Computing?
Mobile Computing at Bentley
Mobile Computing Milestones at Bentley 1985 – Students required to purchase laptops/mobile computers 1990’s – Luggables to Laptops 2002 – “Junior Swap” begins 2002 – Tablet research study with HP 2004 – Pocket PCs in Tech Intensive IT – 45% of incoming freshmen receive Tablet PCs, 55% receive Laptops
Sony
iPod/Nike
MobiTV
oqo
Darth Vader USB Flash Drives Sushi Drives
Navigation Systems Navigation Systems Requires communication with satellites Context processing on specialist devices or “converging” devices translates map coordinates into the position of a road junction Most phones do not use GPS but triangulate based on phone signals GPS provides more reliable services
Convergence
Other than making phone calls, name something you can do with a cell phone.Camera Browse the Web MP3 Player GPS Voice Recorder Appointments / PDA Flash Storage
Barriers/Issues Voice / sound quality Battery life Bluetooth Data Service Cost Connectivity Range
Cell Phone Trends, Standard Development Platforms will ease application development Applications expand beyond voice Adoption of Wireless Phones as a Mobile Wallet Improved voice activation for accessing and searching the web Beefier Security on phones; Individuals Will Own Multiple Phones 2006: Over a $300 billion business selling over 2 billion units annually. Fewer than 5% of cell phone users do not use at least one of the technological innovations introduced in the past five years.
Go Converged?
.mobi Pages must be cell-phone compliant No popups, fast downloads No popups, fast downloads Which URL do I use? Proposal to make browsing less “wieldy” by taking user to.mobi site if using a mobile device and it exists Several hundred thousand will register by
WiMax (802.16e) Worldwide Interoperability for Microwave Access can span many miles and cover wide areas making it suitable for entire cities longer reach, no reliance on Line-of-Sight, greater bandwith, and better encryption. higher speed, data transmissions of up to 70 Mbps offer broadband access in rural or metropolitan areas without having to lay cables