Using code mobility to create ubiquitous and active augmented reality in mobile computing
MobiCom '99 Proceedings of the 5th annual ACM/IEEE international conference on Mobile computing and networking
Towards ubiquitous database in mobile commerce
Proceedings of the 2nd ACM international workshop on Data engineering for wireless and mobile access
Using mobile code to create ubiquitous augmented reality
Wireless Networks - Selected Papers from Mobicom'99
Adaptive tools for the elderly: new devices to cope with age-induced cognitive disabilities
WUAUC'01 Proceedings of the 2001 EC/NSF workshop on Universal accessibility of ubiquitous computing: providing for the elderly
MEX: A Distributed Software Architecture for Wearable Computers
ISWC '99 Proceedings of the 3rd IEEE International Symposium on Wearable Computers
Protocol for dynamic ad-hoc networks using distributed spanning trees
Wireless Networks
Sonic City: the urban environment as a musical interface
NIME '03 Proceedings of the 2003 conference on New interfaces for musical expression
Toward context and preference-aware location-based services
Proceedings of the Eighth ACM International Workshop on Data Engineering for Wireless and Mobile Access
Location-aware privacy and more: a systems approach using context-aware database management systems
Proceedings of the 2nd SIGSPATIAL ACM GIS 2009 International Workshop on Security and Privacy in GIS and LBS
Enabling safe dynamic component-based software adaptation
Architecting Dependable Systems III
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There is a growing interest in a class of systems having dynamic and adaptable properties. In this paper we discuss our work on one subclass of such systems, that of wearable computers. In particular, our interest is in the software organization necessary to build wearable computing systems. We will examine some of the key properties of such a software organization such as the ability to rapidly and dynamically reconfigure software to meet both physical changes and information changes of the wearable system. This has lead us to study a middleware layer for a wearable system that supports dynamic reconfiguration. The middleware approach is studied in the context of the NETMAN - a network maintenance assistant. Current results from the system evaluations and the final system requirements and open issues are presented.