| C. Narayanaswami and M. T. Raghunath. Application design for a smart watch with a high resolution display. In Proceedings of the Fourth International Symposium on Wearable Computers, pages 7--14, Atlanta, GA, October 2000. |
....the token (and hence the user) is not present, the read cannot complete. With ZIA, stolen laptops are protected from malicious use; an attacker cannot reproduce the decryption key. The e#ectiveness of this scheme depends on a token small enough to be worn unobtrusively, such as an IBM Linux watch [20]. This makes the token much less vulnerable to loss or theft than a device that is carried and often set down. The core idea of ZIA is simple, but it requires careful design and implementation. ZIA must Session Encryption File Key Encrypting Key Laptop Token Key File Key File Key ....
C. Narayanaswami and M. T. Raghunath. Application design for a smart watch with a high resolution display. In Proceedings of the Fourth International Symposium on Wearable Computers, pages 7--14, Atlanta, GA, October 2000.
....security and usability. To maximize security, a device must constantly reauthenticate its user. To be usable, authentication must be long lived. We resolve this tension with a new model, called Transient Authentication. In this model, a user wears a small token, such as the IBM Linux watch [18], equipped with a short range wireless link and modest computational resources. This token is able to authenticate constantly on the user s behalf. It also acts as a proximity cue to applications and services; if the token does not respond to an authentication request, the device can take steps to ....
C. Narayanaswami and M. T. Raghunath. Application design for a smart watch with a high resolution display. In Proceedings of the Fourth International Symposium on Wearable Computers, pages 7--14, Atlanta, GA, October 2000.
....To maximize protection, a device must constantly reauthenticate its user. To be usable, authentication must be long lived. We resolve this tension with a new model, called transient authentication. In this model of authentication, a user wears a small token, such as the IBM Linux watch [9], equipped with a short range wireless link and modest computational resources. This token is able to authenticate constantly on the user s behalf. It also acts as a proximity cue to applications and services; if the token does not respond to an authentication request, the device can take steps to ....
C. Narayanaswami and M. T. Raghunath. Application design for a smart watch with a high resolution display. In Proceedings of the Fourth International Symposium on Wearable Computers, pages 7--14, Atlanta, GA, October 2000.
....64 dot matrix LCD with EL backlight, supporting five lines of 16 characters each. The notification application we have developed for the watch provides normal timekeeping function, and two lines of 16 characters are overlayed on the top portion of the display, see Figure 5. The IBM watch computer [14] is an excellent example of the direction this form of interaction technology is heading. Embedding new technology into existing fashionable artefacts worn currently by people. These forms of wearable computing devices have a natural low SW. Tactile display A pager motor is sewn into the ....
C. Narayanaswami and M. T. Raghunath, Application design for a smart watch with a high resolution display, 4th Int'l Symposium on Wearable Computers, Atlanta, GA, 2000.
....more features, their user interfaces get harder to use [3] Meanwhile, another trend is that people are increasingly carrying computerized devices that can communicate. People have cellular phones, pagers, personal digital assistants (PDAs) such as the Palm Pilot or PocketPC, and even watches [16] that can communicate using various wireless methods. The advent of the BlueTooth short distance radio network [8] is expected to enable many devices to communicate with other devices that are within close range. We are investigating how handheld devices can be used to improve the interfaces for ....
Narayanaswami, C. and Raghunath, M.T. "Application Design for a Smart Watch with a High Resolution Display," Proceedings of the Fourth International Symposium on Wearable Computers (ISWC'00), Atlanta, Georgia, 18 - 21 October, 2000. pp. 7-14. http://www.research.ibm.com/WearableComputing/factsheet.h tml
....the beam usually flies away from the target before the beam goes off. Increasingly, people are carrying computerized devices, including Personal Digital Assistants (PDAs) such as Palm and PocketPC devices, computerized cell phones (e.g. the Microsoft phones [16] or even computerized watches [8]. As part of the Pebbles project, we are researching how these kinds of mobile devices will interact with other devices such as those in such a smart room. We describe here our concept of semantic snarfing as a model for how mobile devices might be used to control large displays at a distance. ....
Narayanaswami, C. and Raghunath, M.T. "Application Design for a Smart Watch with a High Resolution Display," in Proceedings of the Fourth International Symposium on Wearable Computers (ISWC'00). 2000. Atlanta, Georgia: pp. 7-14. http://www.research.ibm.com/WearableComputing/factsheet.html.
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C. Narayanaswami and M. T. Raghunath. Application design for a smart watch with a high resolution display. In Proceedings of the Fourth International Symposium on Wearable Computers, pages 7--14, Atlanta, GA, October 2000.
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C. Narayanaswami and M.T. Raghunath, "Application Design for a Smart Watch with a High Resolution Display," Proc. 4th IEEE Int'l Symp. Wearable Computers, IEEE CS Press, Los Alamitos, Calif., 2000, pp. 7-14.
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Narayanaswami C, Raghunath MT (2000) Application design for a smart watch with a high resolution display. In: Proceedings of the Fourth International Symposium on Wearable Computers, Atlanta, GA, 18--21 October 2000
No context found.
C. Narayanaswami and M.T. Raghunath, "Application Design for a Smart Watch with a High Resolution Display," Proc. 4th Int'l Symp. Wearable Computers (ISWC'00), IEEE CS Press, Los Alamitos, Calif., 2000, pp. 7--14.
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