Internetworking with TCP/IP (2nd ed.), vol. I
Internetworking with TCP/IP (2nd ed.), vol. I
Nomadic computing—an opportunity
ACM SIGCOMM Computer Communication Review - Special twenty-fifth anniversary issue. Highlights from 25 years of the Computer Communication Review
A world-wide distributed system using Java and the Internet
HPDC '96 Proceedings of the 5th IEEE International Symposium on High Performance Distributed Computing
Itinerant Agents for Mobile Computing
IEEE Communications Surveys & Tutorials
IPv6: the new Internet protocol
IEEE Communications Magazine
DUET: an agent-based personal communications network
IEEE Communications Magazine
The TINA consortium: toward networking telecommunications information services
IEEE Communications Magazine
A mobile host protocol supporting route optimization and authentication
IEEE Journal on Selected Areas in Communications
CORBA based design and implementation of universal personal computing
Mobile Networks and Applications
Mobility and quality of service across heterogeneous wireless networks
Computer Networks: The International Journal of Computer and Telecommunications Networking - Wireless IP through integration of wireless LAN and cellular networks
International Journal of Web and Grid Services
Mobile virtual communities research: a synthesis of current trends and a look at future perspectives
International Journal of Web Based Communities
Mobility and quality of service across heterogeneous wireless networks
Computer Networks: The International Journal of Computer and Telecommunications Networking - Wireless IP through integration of wireless LAN and cellular networks
Design of universal personal computing using SDL
Computer Communications
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This paper presents a new paradigm for nomadic computing over the Internet called universal personal computing (UPC), where mobile users can access computing resources, network services, and personalized computing environments anywhere using any available terminals. The concept of UPC and system design issues are discussed, and the required system architecture capable of managing different mobile objects, i.e., users and terminals, in the UPC environment is presented. Modifications of connection setup procedures between user application programs to enable addressing based on a global user identity are considered.