Epidemic algorithms for replicated database maintenance
PODC '87 Proceedings of the sixth annual ACM Symposium on Principles of distributed computing
Adaptive interfaces for ubiquitous web access
Communications of the ACM - The Adaptive Web
Moving Java into Mobile Phones
Computer
Semantic Data Caching and Replacement
VLDB '96 Proceedings of the 22th International Conference on Very Large Data Bases
Hardware/Software Co-design of a Secure Ubiquitous System
Computational Intelligence and Security
A ubiquitous processor embedded with progressive cipher pipelines
Proceedings of the 19th ACM Great Lakes symposium on VLSI
Design and implementation of an OSGI-centric remote mobile surveillance system
SMC'09 Proceedings of the 2009 IEEE international conference on Systems, Man and Cybernetics
Practical design and implementation of recognition assisted dynamic surveillance system
Computers and Electrical Engineering
Adaptive frame synchronization for surveillance system across a heterogeneous network
Engineering Applications of Artificial Intelligence
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Mobile devices are gaining popularity worldwide, and constant hardware improvement is increasing their computational power every year. So, we can now equip mobile devices with more powerful applications. One of the most promising software platforms for mobile devices is Java 2 Micro Edition. Sun representatives assert that 18 to 20 million mobile phones support the J2ME platform. Analysts predict that within the next few years, this technology will become omnipresent. According to Gartner Group estimates, in 2006, approximately 80 percent of mobile phones will support Java. In our experience in creating applications for Java-enabled mobile devices, we've had to deal with several unforeseen problems not typical of desktop Java development projects. Unfortunately, literature on the subject has only fleetingly mentioned most of these problems. Here, we describe some of them and propose our solutions.