Charting past, present, and future research in ubiquitous computing
ACM Transactions on Computer-Human Interaction (TOCHI) - Special issue on human-computer interaction in the new millennium, Part 1
Integrated personal mobility architecture: a complete personal mobility solution
Mobile Networks and Applications
NetChaser: Agent Support for Personal Mobility
IEEE Internet Computing
Multimedia Customisation Using an Event Notification Protocol
ICDCSW '02 Proceedings of the 22nd International Conference on Distributed Computing Systems
A Survey of Context-Aware Mobile Computing Research
A Survey of Context-Aware Mobile Computing Research
A Three-Tier Architecture for Ubiquitous Data Access
AICCSA '01 Proceedings of the ACS/IEEE International Conference on Computer Systems and Applications
IPMoA: Integrated Personal Mobility Architecture
ISCC '01 Proceedings of the Sixth IEEE Symposium on Computers and Communications
Personal Mobility in the ICEBERG Integrated Communication Network
Personal Mobility in the ICEBERG Integrated Communication Network
Person-level routing in the mobile people architecture
USITS'99 Proceedings of the 2nd conference on USENIX Symposium on Internet Technologies and Systems - Volume 2
HotTown, enabling context-aware and extensible mobile interactive spaces
IEEE Wireless Communications
IEEE Wireless Communications
A common multi-agent testbed for diverse seamless personal information networking applications
IEEE Communications Magazine
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With the growing popularity of wireless devices, mobile users are wanting access to communications regardless of where they are and what devices they are using. Although most research has focussed on ubiquitous access to communication, people also want to have more control over when, where and how communications are delivered. This paper describes a personalized communication system that is able to intercept, filter, convert and direct communications to an appropriate device in an appropriate form depending on the user's context and preferences, thereby giving the user control over the delivery and presentation of information. This approach has been adapted to a pervasive system in the Daidalos project.