Contributors
Jakob E. Bardram, PhD
IT University of Copenhagen
Copenhagen, Denmark
Shwetak Patel, PhD
Computer Science and Engineering
University of Washington
Seattle, Washington, USA
A.J. Bernheim Brush, PhD
Microsoft Research
Redmond, Washington, USA
Aaron Quigley, PhD
HITLab Australia
University Tasmania
Tasmania, Australia
Anind K. Dey, PhD
HCI Institute
Carnegie Mellon University
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA
Alex S. Taylor, PhD
Microsoft Research
Cambridge, UK
Adrian Friday, PhD
Computing Department
Lancaster University
Lancaster, UK
Alexander Varshavsky, PhD
AT&T Labs
Florham Park, New Jersey, USA
John Krumm, PhD
Microsoft Research
Redmond, Washington, USA
Roy Want, PhD
Intel Corporation
Santa Clara, California, USA
Marc Langheinrich, PhD
Faculty of Informatics
University of Lugano (USI)
Lugano, Switzerland
Foreword
It has been nearly two decades since the term "ubiquitous computing" burst into our research vernacular. One of the strengths, and one of the challenges, of "ubicomp" is that it is hard to pin down exactly what the intellectual core is. From the very beginning, ubicomp researchers have investigated both the bleeding edge technology challenges as well as the human-centered opportunities. There are other intellectual mergers of interest as well, including the bridge between the physical and the digital worlds and the (re-)merging of the academic communities of hardware and software.
But this very diversity of intellectual themes presents two challenges to our community, both of which motivate the need for a book like this one. First of all, for established researchers, we have to educate ourselves on the language and methods of disciplines different from the ones we have practiced for many years. Why? Because if we are to advance as an intellectual community, then we all need to embrace the inherent diversity in our thoughts and skills. While it is not strictly necessary that we become expert in all of the relevant subdisciplines of ubicomp represented in this book, it is necessary that we appreciate all of the perspectives and that we strive to make our own work more relevant and accessible to those many perspectives.
Second, and more importantly, we have to provide a foundation for future generations. I deeply believe that any interesting problem to explore in our everyday lives requires expertise from many disciplines and perspectives. Consequently, we have to train new researchers so that they will be able to stand on the results of the past and direct us as a community to go beyond where we are today. In short, our students must be empowered to be better than we are, or we face extinction as a relevant intellectual community.
Under the skillful guidance of John Krumm, the authors of these chapters have assembled a collection of well-written, tutorial style chapters on topics that have become core to research advances in ubiquitous computing over the past two decades. The result is a must-read text that provides an historical lens to see how ubicomp has matured into a multidisciplinary endeavor and will be an essential reference to researchers and those who want to learn more about this evolving field.
Professor Gregory D. Abowd, PhD
College of Computing
Georgia Institute of Technology
Atlanta, Georgia, USA
發表於2024-11-14
Ubiquitous Computing Fundamentals 2024 pdf epub mobi 電子書 下載
圖書標籤: 計算機 計算機科學技術 Ubiquitous 專業課
春季學期上 Shwetak Patel 課的時候翻過一遍,介紹瞭 ubicomp 學術領域裏各種有趣的項目。就是書名起得大瞭點,真正的 fundamental 還是 EECS 的基礎課啊 ;D
評分春季學期上 Shwetak Patel 課的時候翻過一遍,介紹瞭 ubicomp 學術領域裏各種有趣的項目。就是書名起得大瞭點,真正的 fundamental 還是 EECS 的基礎課啊 ;D
評分春季學期上 Shwetak Patel 課的時候翻過一遍,介紹瞭 ubicomp 學術領域裏各種有趣的項目。就是書名起得大瞭點,真正的 fundamental 還是 EECS 的基礎課啊 ;D
評分春季學期上 Shwetak Patel 課的時候翻過一遍,介紹瞭 ubicomp 學術領域裏各種有趣的項目。就是書名起得大瞭點,真正的 fundamental 還是 EECS 的基礎課啊 ;D
評分春季學期上 Shwetak Patel 課的時候翻過一遍,介紹瞭 ubicomp 學術領域裏各種有趣的項目。就是書名起得大瞭點,真正的 fundamental 還是 EECS 的基礎課啊 ;D
Ubiquitous Computing Fundamentals 2024 pdf epub mobi 電子書 下載