DocumentCode
1951140
Title
User interfaces for network services: what, from where, and how
Author
Ponnekanti, Shankar R. ; Robles, Luis Alberto ; Fox, Armando
Author_Institution
Dept. of Comput. Sci., Stanford Univ., CA, USA
fYear
2002
fDate
2002
Firstpage
138
Lastpage
147
Abstract
An important problem in the context of network services in ubiquitous computing is the support of ad-hoc interaction. Ad-hoc interaction allows a user entering an environment to discover, request, and interact with user interfaces for the locally available network services, even if she has done minimal or no installation in advance. We observe that most recently-proposed ad-hoc interaction frameworks lack two important mechanisms: distribution and personalization. A distribution mechanism would make it easy to add third-party UIs and to centrally administer UIs across multiple independent workspaces forming an administrative or logical unit, such as all workspaces on a campus. A personalization mechanism would enable a user to see familiar UIs as she roams to different workspaces. We propose extensions to an existing ad-hoc interaction system, ICrafter, that enable these two independent behaviors. The mechanisms raise important policy questions; although we have not studied optimal policies, we outline the policy space and the policies we have adopted.
Keywords
mobile computing; user interface management systems; ICrafter; ad-hoc interaction; distribution mechanism; locally available network services; personalization; policy space; ubiquitous computing; user interfaces; Computer science; Context-aware services; Displays; Hardware; Java; Portable computers; Ubiquitous computing; Uniform resource locators; User interfaces; Web pages;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Mobile Computing Systems and Applications, 2002. Proceedings Fourth IEEE Workshop on
Print_ISBN
0-7695-1647-5
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/MCSA.2002.1017493
Filename
1017493
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