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M o b i l i t y

M o b i l i t y. INF-5261 26 January 2005, 14:15 – 16:00 jo.herstad@ifi.uio.no. Overview. Perspectives Past – present – future Mobility – terminology - concepts Conditions for the possibility of mobility Projects. The questions!. What is mobile? What is not mobile?. human.

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M o b i l i t y

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  1. M o b i l i t y INF-5261 26 January 2005, 14:15 – 16:00 jo.herstad@ifi.uio.no

  2. Overview • Perspectives • Past – present – future • Mobility – terminology - concepts • Conditions for the possibility of mobility • Projects

  3. The questions! • What is mobile? • What is not mobile? human technology situation

  4. Relations – relational or observer – observed Observation tower trains

  5. The past – the present – the future • The past is history. The future is a mystery. Now is a gift. That is why it is called the present  past now future

  6. Inventions and standards in Norway 2004 1835 1876 1908 1960 1993 1981 Optic Telegraph Telegraph - Morse Telephone - Bell Ship to shore radio communicaiton Rogaland Radio HF NMT-450 NMT-900 GSM in Norway 3. gen. wireless

  7. person service session terminal Mobility - terminology • Mobility • Person mobility • Session mobility • Terminal mobility • Component mobility • Services mobility • Multimedia mobility • Micromobility • User mobility • Wireless technology affords mobility • Personal terminals affords mobility • Internet affords mobility

  8. Personal mobility • The ability of a user to access services from any terminal and any location, (including invitations to join sessions). This ability may be restricted due to contract agreements between the Consumer and Retailer, and due to user system capabilities.

  9. Terminal mobility • The ability of a terminal to change physical location. This includes terminals which can continue to support services while moving, and those that cannot.

  10. Session mobility • The capability to suspend a session and resume it on a different location and or terminal.

  11. Viewpoints – point of view • Micro mobility • Discrete mobility (for example DECT, Hotspots) • Continous mobility (for example GSM) • Local mobilty • Global mobility • Component mobility • And....what concepts are needed?

  12. Modes of mobility • Wandering, visiting, traveling • Ref: Ljungberg and Kristoffersen • Vagabond • Ref: Øystein Olsen, hovedfagsoppgave 1999. • By means of ”transportation” technology - footwear, bicycles, automobiles, buses, ++ • John Urry – societies

  13. The vagabond Wherever I may roam (Metallica) ...and the road becomes my bride I have stripped of all but pride so in her I do confide and she keeps me satisfied gives me all I need ...and with dust in throat I crave only knowledge will I save to the game you stay a slave rover wanderer nomad vagabond call me what you will but I'll take my time anywhere free to speak my mind anywhere and I'll redefine anywhere anywhere I may roam where I lay my head is home ...and the earth becomes my throne I adapt to the unknown under wandering stars I've grown by myself but not alone I ask no one ...and my ties are severed clean the less I have the more I gain off the beaten path I reign rover wanderer nomad vagabond call me what you will but I'll take my time anywhere I'm free to speak my mind anywhere and I'll never mind anywhere anywhere I may roam where I lay my head is home but i'll take my time anywhere free to speak my mind and I'll take my find anywhere anywhere I may roam where I lay my head is home carved upon my stone my body lie, but still I roam wherever I may roam

  14. The conditions for the possibility of mobility • Space as the condition for the possibility of mobility. • Wireless technologies as the condition for the possiblity of mobility. • Miniaturisation as the condition for the possibility of mobility. Investigations of these conditions

  15. Space as the condition for the possiblity of mobility • What is space? What is a place? • Cartesian space. • Subjective space. • Experienced place. • People in places. • Tecnology and places space • Use in place. • Body as a place. • Body and equipent in places.

  16. Locations – example from KnowMobile US university clinic RH university clinic US university clinic local hospital 1 local hospital 2 local hospital 8 general practice 1 general practice n home other place

  17. Indoor and outdoor places • Indoor • Hospital • Local praxis • Home • Inside automobile • Corner • --- • Outdoors • Roads • Pavements • Public places • Under a tree • … I’m all over the place (ref: Belotti & Bly)

  18. Personal sense regions in places

  19. Use in context

  20. Wireless technology as the condition for the possibility of mobility • What is wire-less? • Snorløs • Trådløs • What is the wire? • Relational technology.

  21. Wireless networks in places world country region room person

  22. Wireless local network – examples • IEEE 802.11 • wireless LAN • Blutetooth • 2.4 GHz open • small size • low effect, < 0.1 watt • voice and data • 1 Mbps robust transfer rate • coverage 10 meter (100 meter) a tooth

  23. Miniaturisation as the contition for the possibilty • The computer. • The radio. • The telephone. • The stereo. • The camera. • ..... are all getting smaller.

  24. Inside the terminal Miniaturization • Processor • Memory • Battery • Input output units, nuts and bolts Radio technology • Coverage • Utilization of specter • New specter • Compression HCI - Human Computer Interaction for mobile and wearable devices

  25. Terminal • A physical equipment which a user operates to interact with a network or other users. This terminal may have signaling capability (or capability to handle messages related to an object-oriented interface) to perform service procedures. This terminal may have capability of control bearers to connect/disconnect bearer connections.

  26. Multiple terminals

  27. @ Heterogenity

  28. Trend - convergence and diffusion telephone radio computer

  29. Convergence or collision Convergence Collision Telecom WAP Symbian Bluetooth WAP Symbian Bluetooth Media Computer

  30. Value networks – a way to sort things out infrastructure services and applications access and promotion Ref: Stabell and Fjelstad

  31. Mobility - communication and information input output PC patient student network 1 network n input output PDA student input output mobile teacher input output “other” local doctor “other”

  32. Summing up • Mobility as a ”relational science”. • Mobility – ”past, present, future”. • Space as the condition for the possiblity of mobility. • Wireless technology as the condition for the possiblity of mobility. • Miniaturisation as the condition for the possiblity of mobility.

  33. Projects Two conditions are to be met in order to succeed. • First start. • Then continue. Deliverables: • Project plan, WonderDoc date:: • Status report, date:: • Final report, date::

  34. Projects Group size: 3 – 7 Project plan – requirements: The “what, when, who, how, which, where” of the project. (1 - 2 pages) Status report – describe the status of the project (5-15 pages) Final report – report basis for presentation (10 – 30 pages)

  35. Projects The phenomena to be investigated and described: • Mobile people, users. • Mobile technologies. • Situations, contexts, environements. Combination of: • Theoretical description and analysis • Empirical description and analysis • Synthesis or construction • Writing, dissemination

  36. According to Nygaard science is about… • Observation. The empirical study of phenomena: their identification, observed properties and behavior. • Analysis. Comprehension and explanation of phenomena in terms of an underlying theory. • Synthesis (or construction of technology). Knowledge organized for the purpose of designing, generating or modifying phenomena. • Multiperspective reflection. The concurrent or alternating use of several perspectives in the consideration of phenomena - perspectives either from within the same science or drawn from more than one science. The study of how changes, introduced according to one viewpoint, affect properties of the phenomena when regarded from another viewpoint.

  37. Project groups • Name: • Establish ”peer groups”. • Each group is a sparring partner for one other group; comments, advise, care, concern, inspiration etc. etc.

  38. Artikkelgjennomgang Artikkelgjennomgang • Velge en artikkel. • Analysere den. • Presentere den. • Samtale om den. • Koble artikkelen mot en annen artikkel. • Bruk gjerne lysark, demonstrasjon etc. • Innlevering: NIL

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