The evolution of mobile technologies allows the emerging of ubiquitous systems, able to anticipate user needs and to seamlessly adapt to context changes. These systems present the problem of dynamic adaptation in a highly distributed, heterogeneous and volatile environment, since it may be difficult to collect and process context information from distributed unknown sources. In order to facilitate the development of such systems, this paper extends an existing coordination framework based on tuple spaces, aiming at the management of distributed information. Hence, a decentralized coordination framework was created, offering primitives to developers to create ubiquitous systems able to interact and cooperate in scenarios of total decentralization. This paper reports some experimental results obtained in a testbed of smartphones and tablets which demonstrate the practical feasibility of our approach and pointed out how our solution can grant context data dissemination in ad hoc and infrastructured networks.