GroupLens: an open architecture for collaborative filtering of netnews
CSCW '94 Proceedings of the 1994 ACM conference on Computer supported cooperative work
Agent factory: an environment for the fabrication of multiagent systems
Foundations of distributed artificial intelligence
Supporting software agents on small devices
Proceedings of the first international joint conference on Autonomous agents and multiagent systems: part 2
Fundamentals of Wearable Computers and Augumented Reality
Fundamentals of Wearable Computers and Augumented Reality
Understanding and Using Context
Personal and Ubiquitous Computing
IEEE Pervasive Computing
A Taxonomy of Recommender Agents on theInternet
Artificial Intelligence Review
GeoNotes: Social and Navigational Aspects of Location-Based Information Systems
UbiComp '01 Proceedings of the 3rd international conference on Ubiquitous Computing
Position-Annotated Photographs: A Geotemporal Web
IEEE Pervasive Computing
MobShare: controlled and immediate sharing of mobile images
Proceedings of the 12th annual ACM international conference on Multimedia
Supporting Social Interaction with Smart Phones
IEEE Pervasive Computing
FrameDrops: a mobile VideoBlog for workgroups and virtual communities
GROUP '05 Proceedings of the 2005 international ACM SIGGROUP conference on Supporting group work
MyLifeBits: a personal database for everything
Communications of the ACM - Personal information management
Augmenting travel gossip: design for mobile communities
OZCHI '05 Proceedings of the 17th Australia conference on Computer-Human Interaction: Citizens Online: Considerations for Today and the Future
Mobile blogging: experiences of technologically inspired design
CHI '06 Extended Abstracts on Human Factors in Computing Systems
Ambient Intelligence, Wireless Networking, And Ubiquitous Computing
Ambient Intelligence, Wireless Networking, And Ubiquitous Computing
Developing Multi-Agent Systems with JADE (Wiley Series in Agent Technology)
Developing Multi-Agent Systems with JADE (Wiley Series in Agent Technology)
Design and implementation of Blog rendering and accessing instantly system (BRAINS)
Journal of Network and Computer Applications - Special issue: Network and information security: A computational intelligence approach
Mobile agents for mobile tourists: a user evaluation of Gulliver's Genie
Interacting with Computers
ACCESS: an agent based architecture for the rapid prototyping of location aware services
ICCS'05 Proceedings of the 5th international conference on Computational Science - Volume Part III
Agent factory micro edition: a framework for ambient applications
ICCS'06 Proceedings of the 6th international conference on Computational Science - Volume Part III
Mobile portal personalization: tools and techniques
ITWP'03 Proceedings of the 2003 international conference on Intelligent Techniques for Web Personalization
Gulliver's Genie: a multi-agent system for ubiquitous and intelligent content delivery
Computer Communications
Special issue on Ambient Intelligence
Information Systems Frontiers
An agent-based wireless sensor network for water quality data collection
UCAmI'12 Proceedings of the 6th international conference on Ubiquitous Computing and Ambient Intelligence
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Mobile computing is undoubtedly one of the predominant computer usage paradigms in operation today. The implications of what might be cautiously termed a usage paradigm shift have still not crystallised fully, either for society, or those envisaging a new raft of applications and services for mobile users. However, fundamental to the current and future success of mobile computing are mobile telecommunications networks. Such networks have been a success story in their own right in recent years, both as traditional voice carriers and, increasingly importantly, as a conduit of mobile data. The potential for new mobile data applications is immense, but, crucially, this potential is severely compromised by two factors inherent in mobile computing: limited bandwidth and computationally restricted devices. Hence, the academic and commercial interest in harnessing intelligent techniques as a means of mitigating these concerns, and ensuring the user experience is a satisfactory one. In this paper, the broad area of intelligence in telecommunications networks is examined, and issues relating to the deployment of intelligent technologies are explored. In particular, the potential of intelligent agents is identified as a viable mechanism for realising a full end-to-end deployment of intelligence throughout the network, including possibly the most crucial component: the end user's device. As an illustration of the viability of this approach, a brief description of a mobile blogging application is presented.