International Journal of Man-Machine Studies
Fundamental challenges in mobile computing
PODC '96 Proceedings of the fifteenth annual ACM symposium on Principles of distributed computing
Saving portable computer battery power through remote process execution
ACM SIGMOBILE Mobile Computing and Communications Review
Determinants of adoption of mobile games under mobile broadband wireless access environment
Information and Management
The DeLone and McLean Model of Information Systems Success: A Ten-Year Update
Journal of Management Information Systems
Mobile communications and mobile services
International Journal of Mobile Communications
Virtualized in-cloud security services for mobile devices
Proceedings of the First Workshop on Virtualization in Mobile Computing
CloudCom '09 Proceedings of the 1st International Conference on Cloud Computing
MAUI: making smartphones last longer with code offload
Proceedings of the 8th international conference on Mobile systems, applications, and services
Phosphor: A Cloud Based DRM Scheme with Sim Card
APWEB '10 Proceedings of the 2010 12th International Asia-Pacific Web Conference
User experience of mobile photo sharing in the cloud
Proceedings of the 9th International Conference on Mobile and Ubiquitous Multimedia
Why do people play social network games?
Computers in Human Behavior
Smartphones as smart pedagogical tools: Implications for smartphones as u-learning devices
Computers in Human Behavior
Energy consumption in mobile devices: why future systems need requirements–aware energy scale-down
PACS'03 Proceedings of the Third international conference on Power - Aware Computer Systems
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This study identifies and investigates a number of cognitive factors that contribute to shaping user perceptions of and attitude toward mobile cloud computing services by integrating these factors with the technology acceptance model. A structural equation modeling analysis is employed on data collected from 1099 survey samples, and results reveal that user acceptance of mobile cloud services is largely affected by perceived mobility, connectedness, security, quality of service and system, and satisfaction. Both theoretical and practical implications of the study's findings are discussed.