2009 First International Conference on Networked Digital Technologies 2009
DOI: 10.1109/ndt.2009.5272068
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Taxonomy for ubiquitous computing environments

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Cited by 21 publications
(11 citation statements)
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References 14 publications
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“…Lupiana et al proposed a classification of ubiquitous computing environments. They differentiated between interactive environments (support group events), including creative spaces and meeting spaces, and smart environments, including ambient spaces and smart spaces [56]. Roalter et al discussed that one of the main and still unsolved problems for researchers in the domain of intelligent environments is a suitable middleware [57].…”
Section: Forms Of Manifestationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Lupiana et al proposed a classification of ubiquitous computing environments. They differentiated between interactive environments (support group events), including creative spaces and meeting spaces, and smart environments, including ambient spaces and smart spaces [56]. Roalter et al discussed that one of the main and still unsolved problems for researchers in the domain of intelligent environments is a suitable middleware [57].…”
Section: Forms Of Manifestationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This concept is defined as a method for improving computer use effectively making it invisible to the user and is mainly characterized by the connection of things to computing [5]; thus the people it can focus solely on the task and not the tool [6]. Ubiquitous computing or UbiComp has two main objectives: (a) reduce the amount of attention that users invest in their devices and (b) create the necessary interfaces to access any information at any time and any place [7].…”
Section: Ubiquitous Computingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It is also possible to classify the application environment of UbiComp depending on the work being performed; There are four general classifications [7].…”
Section: Ubiquitous Computingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Recently, Lupiana [5] proposed a taxonomy to distinguish ubiquitous environments. He categorized UbiComp environments in two major classes: Interactive and Smart environments.…”
Section: State-of-the-artmentioning
confidence: 99%