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- research-articleJanuary 2008
A Cochlear-Implant Processor for Encoding Music and Lowering Stimulation Power
IEEE Pervasive Computing (IEEECS_PERVASIVE), Volume 7, Issue 1Pages 40–48https://doi.org/10.1109/MPRV.2008.3This 75 dB, 357 mW analog cochlear-implant processor encodes fine-phase-timing spectral information in its asynchronous stimulation outputs, to convey music to deaf patients. This processor features asynchronous interleaved sampling (AIS) and uses a ...
- research-articleApril 2005
Using Smart Phones to Access Site-Specific Services
IEEE Pervasive Computing (IEEECS_PERVASIVE), Volume 4, Issue 2Pages 60–66https://doi.org/10.1109/MPRV.2005.44Using smart-phones to access site-specific mobile services can offer users enhanced functionality (for example, personalization and increased access to mobile content) while reducing service deployment and maintenance costs. The authors present the ...
- review-articleApril 2005
T-Engine: Japan's Ubiquitous Computing Architecture Is Ready for Prime Time
IEEE Pervasive Computing (IEEECS_PERVASIVE), Volume 4, Issue 2Pages 4–9https://doi.org/10.1109/MPRV.2005.40Japan is quietly positioning itself for the next phase in digital technology: ubiquitous computing. A sign of things to come is T-Engine, arguably the most advanced ubiquitous computing platform in the world. T-Engine enables the distribution of ...
- opinionApril 2005
Swiss Army Knife or Wallet?
IEEE Pervasive Computing (IEEECS_PERVASIVE), Volume 4, Issue 2Pages 2–3https://doi.org/10.1109/MPRV.2005.39Today, the cell phone is the dominant mobile device. What comes next? As circuit density improves, we see a convergence of mobile device functionalityýcell phones combined with PDAs or with email capability or both. Where do we go from here?
- research-articleApril 2005
Supporting Social Interaction with Smart Phones
IEEE Pervasive Computing (IEEECS_PERVASIVE), Volume 4, Issue 2Pages 35–41https://doi.org/10.1109/MPRV.2005.38The smart phone offers communication, connectivity, content consumption, and content creativity.This powerful device is both personal, containing private information, and public, providing a digital link to the rest of the world. The author has designed,...
- research-articleApril 2005
Social Serendipity: Mobilizing Social Software
IEEE Pervasive Computing (IEEECS_PERVASIVE), Volume 4, Issue 2Pages 28–34https://doi.org/10.1109/MPRV.2005.37The Serendipity system senses a social environment and cues informal interactions between nearby users who donýt know each other, but probably should. The system uses Bluetooth hardware addresses to detect and identify proximate people and matches them ...
- discussionApril 2005
Smart Camera Phones: Limits and Applications
IEEE Pervasive Computing (IEEECS_PERVASIVE), Volume 4, Issue 2Pages 84–87https://doi.org/10.1109/MPRV.2005.36The authors review MMAPI technology and explore how users might use their phones' cameras as more than just conventional cameras. Their goal was to understand this technology and its limitations and to clarify what we can (and canýt) achieve with ...
- opinionApril 2005
Guest Editors' Introduction: The Smart Phone--A First Platform for Pervasive Computing
IEEE Pervasive Computing (IEEECS_PERVASIVE), Volume 4, Issue 2Pages 18–19https://doi.org/10.1109/MPRV.2005.32The mobile or smart phone is ushering in the real age of ubiquitous computing, and we shouldnýt undervalue its importance. This issue highlights work that presents specific smart phone applications as well as programming infrastructure for further ...
- research-articleApril 2005
Enabling Pervasive Computing with Smart Phones
IEEE Pervasive Computing (IEEECS_PERVASIVE), Volume 4, Issue 2Pages 20–27https://doi.org/10.1109/MPRV.2005.30The authors discuss their experience with a number of mobile telephony projects carried out in the context of the European Union Information Society Technologies research program, which aims to develop mobile information services. They identify areas ...