Patch panel: enabling control-flow interoperability in ubicomp environments
Rafael Ballagas,A. Szybalski,Armando Fox +2 more
- 14 Mar 2004
- pp 241-252
TL;DR: An implemented prototype of the patch panel is described, including examples of its use drawn from real life applications in production use in the iRoom ubiquitous computing environment.
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Abstract: Ubiquitous computing environments accrete slowly over time rather than springing into existence all at once. Mechanisms are needed for incremental integration- the problem of how to incrementally add or modify behaviors in existing ubicomp environments. Examples include adding new input modalities and choreographing the behavior of existing independent applications. The iROS event heap, via its publish-subscribe coordination mechanism, provides the foundation for interoperation through event intermediation, but does not directly provide facilities for expressing these intermediations. The patch panel provides a general facility for retargeting event flow. Intermediations can be expressed as simple event translation mappings or as more complex finite-state machines. We describe an implemented prototype of the patch panel, including examples of its use drawn from real life applications in production use in the iRoom ubiquitous computing environment.
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References
Using Dynamic Mediation to Integrate COTS Entities in a Ubiquitous Computing Environment
Emre Kiciman,Armando Fox +1 more
- 25 Sep 2000
TL;DR: The Paths architecture, the prototype implementation, and the experience and lessons based on several production applications built with the framework are described, and some continuing work on Paths is outlined in the context of the Stanford Interactive Workspaces project.
The Case for Recombinant Computing
W. Keith Edwards,Mark W. Newman,Jana Z. Sedivy +2 more
- 01 Jan 2001
TL;DR: A case for "recombinant computing"—a set of common interaction patterns that leverage mobile code to allow rich interactions among computational entities with only limited a priori knowledge of one another is presented.
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The Aware Home: A Living Laboratory for Ubiquitous Computing Research
Cory D. Kidd,Robert J. Orr,Gregory D. Abowd,Christopher G. Atkeson,Irfan Essa,Blair MacIntyre,Elizabeth D. Mynatt,Thad Starner,Wendy C. Newstetter +8 more
TL;DR: The Aware Home project is introduced and some of the technology-and human-centered research objectives in creating the Aware Home are outlined, to create a living laboratory for research in ubiquitous computing for everyday activities.
Challenge: recombinant computing and the speakeasy approach
W. Keith Edwards,Mark W. Newman,Jana Z. Sedivy,Trevor F. Smith,Shahram Izadi +4 more
- 23 Sep 2002
TL;DR: A case for "recombinant computing" -- a set of common interaction patterns that leverage mobile code to allow rich interactions among computational entities with only limited a priori knowledge of one another is presented.