enquiry on Sun, 28 Oct 2007 18:20:07 +0100 (CET) |
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Re: <nettime> New Adventures in Mobile Computing |
To all nettime users New Adventures in Mobile Computing Wireless networking is revolutionising the way people work and play. By removing physical wiring commonly associated with high-speed networking, individuals are able to use networks in ways never thought possible in the past. The wireless revolution will require bringing the Internet and mobile devices together into a seamless mobile system, allowing access to information that is not only independent of the source of the information, but also independent of the location of the person accessing it. Wireless voice communications build on the mobile phone network, and wireless data applications that are based on that and the Internet has the potential to be a huge future market. The mobile system is not just the mobile device, but also the combination of air network, cable connections, servers, PC?s, software, networking, information, and everything else that makes the mobile device in my hand usable. Mobile devices will have to be handheld and small enough to put in your pocket to become usable everywhere. Examples of mobile devices are mobile phones, personal digital assistants, and mini laptops. To find information on the street with a laptop can take up to three minutes. If you can?t pick up the mobile device and walk out the building while maintaining contact and continuing to use the applications you were using, it is not really mobile. Independence of the user network, whether it is cabled or wireless, is one feature of the web revolution that has changed the way we design applications and information systems. The browser is the platform on which you design the information access and interactions of the user, not the operating system. Family members can check email from anywhere in the house, and they can pool resources with neighbours and share one community broadband Internet connection. Wireless users have many more opportunities in front of them, but those opportunities open up the user to greater risk. With wireless networking, there is little physical security. The radio waves that make wireless networking possible are also what make wireless networking open to eavesdropping. A user can be anywhere nearby listening to all the traffic from you network. Wireless networks are showing up everywhere. Businesses are deploying WLANs to allow employees to roam freely around locations without leaving the network. People weren?t meant to sit in the same place, day in and day out, the combination of a PDA and wireless networking providing Internet access wherever we go is liberating. Some airports offer wireless access so mobile users can continue to be productive while waiting for plane departures, and communities are banding together to provide wireless Internet access to homes that may not have direct access to wired broadband networks. Mark Bower Director NextWave.IT Limited www.nextwaveit.biz enquiry@nextwaveit.biz # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: http://mail.kein.org/mailman/listinfo/nettime-l # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@kein.org