SIGMOD '95 Proceedings of the 1995 ACM SIGMOD international conference on Management of data
Generalized model for linear referencing
Proceedings of the 7th ACM international symposium on Advances in geographic information systems
K-Nearest Neighbor Search for Moving Query Point
SSTD '01 Proceedings of the 7th International Symposium on Advances in Spatial and Temporal Databases
A Spatiotemporal Model and Language for Moving Objects on Road Networks
SSTD '01 Proceedings of the 7th International Symposium on Advances in Spatial and Temporal Databases
ESA '02 Proceedings of the 10th Annual European Symposium on Algorithms
Location Based Services
A Weight-based Map Matching Method in Moving Objects Databases
SSDBM '04 Proceedings of the 16th International Conference on Scientific and Statistical Database Management
Integrated data management for mobile services in the real world
VLDB '03 Proceedings of the 29th international conference on Very large data bases - Volume 29
Techniques for Efficient Road-Network-Based Tracking of Moving Objects
IEEE Transactions on Knowledge and Data Engineering
Mining frequent trajectory patterns in spatial-temporal databases
Information Sciences: an International Journal
Hyper-local, directions-based ranking of places
Proceedings of the VLDB Endowment
Geo-Enabled, mobile services—a tale of routes, detours, and dead ends
DASFAA'06 Proceedings of the 11th international conference on Database Systems for Advanced Applications
In-Route skyline querying for location-based services
W2GIS'04 Proceedings of the 4th international conference on Web and Wireless Geographical Information Systems
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With the continuing advances in wireless communications, geo-positioning, and portable electronics, an infrastructure is emerging that enables the delivery of on-line, location-enabled services to very large numbers of mobile users. A typical usage situation for mobile services is one characterized by a small screen and no keyboard, and by the service being only a secondary focus of the user. It is therefore particularly important to deliver the "right" information and service at the right time, with as little user interaction as possible. This may be achieved by making services context aware. Mobile users frequently follow the same route to a destination as they did during previous trips to the destination, and the route and destination are important aspects of the context for a range of services. This paper presents key concepts underlying a software component that discovers the routes of a user along with their usage patterns and that makes the accumulated routes available to services. Experiences from using the component with real GPS logs are reported.