Difference between revisions of "Ubiquitous Computing"

From Cyborg Anthropology
Jump to: navigation, search
(Created page with 'The promises of ubiquitous computing and the evented web ===Definition=== In the 1980’s, researchers at Xerox …')
 
Line 1: Line 1:
 
[[File:ubiquitious-computing-evented-web.jpg|400px|thumb|right|The promises of ubiquitous computing and the evented web]]
 
[[File:ubiquitious-computing-evented-web.jpg|400px|thumb|right|The promises of ubiquitous computing and the evented web]]
 
 
===Definition===
 
===Definition===
In the 1980’s, researchers at Xerox Parc talked about “the inevitable withdrawal of the computer from the desktop and into a host of old and new devices, including coffeepots, watches, microwave ovens, and copying machines. These researchers saw the computer as growing in power while withdrawing as a presence” ([http://amzn.to/bQ3Hv2 Mosco], 2004, p.20).
+
Ubiquitous computing is a term used to describe the growing ability for devices and objects to be able to communicate with each other over protocols embedded in everyday objects.
 +
 
 +
===History===
 +
In the 1980’s, researchers at Xerox Parc talked about “the inevitable withdrawal of the computer from the desktop and into a host of old and new devices, including coffeepots, watches, microwave ovens, and copying machines. These researchers saw the computer as growing in power while withdrawing as a presence”.
  
 
[[File:irc-hub-home-automation-ubiqitious-computing.jpg|400px|thumb|right|Using IRC as a hub for affordable ubiquitous computing]]
 
[[File:irc-hub-home-automation-ubiqitious-computing.jpg|400px|thumb|right|Using IRC as a hub for affordable ubiquitous computing]]
  
====Growing in Power While Withdrawing in Presence====
+
[[Category:Book Pages]]
 +
[[Category:Finished]]

Revision as of 21:40, 5 June 2011

The promises of ubiquitous computing and the evented web

Definition

Ubiquitous computing is a term used to describe the growing ability for devices and objects to be able to communicate with each other over protocols embedded in everyday objects.

History

In the 1980’s, researchers at Xerox Parc talked about “the inevitable withdrawal of the computer from the desktop and into a host of old and new devices, including coffeepots, watches, microwave ovens, and copying machines. These researchers saw the computer as growing in power while withdrawing as a presence”.

Using IRC as a hub for affordable ubiquitous computing