| Brumitt, B., et al. Ubiquitous Computing and the Role of Geometry. In IEEE Personal Communications, August 2000. |
....increase their investigation of techniques that can exploit familiar human interaction devices, such as whiteboards, walls, tape, paper pads, markers, and pens, while simultaneously crossing the boundary between the physical and digital worlds. Promising lines of research include the Easy Living [25] and Sentient Computing [26] projects. Finding effective methods to bridge the gap between people and computers promises to yield great improvement in the interaction of groups, leading to a boon for CSCW. Outlook for CSCW Computer supported cooperative work has become a hot technology and ....
Brumitt, B., et al. Ubiquitous computing and the role of geometry. IEEE Pers. Commun. 2000, 7 (5).
....symbolic location information with additional information, infrastructure, or both. For example, a laptop equipped with a GPS receiver can access a separate database that contains the positions and geometric service regions of other objects to provide applications with symbolic information [7]. Linking real time train positions to the reservation and ticketing database can help locate a passenger on a train. Applications can also use the physical position to determine a range of symbolic information. For example, one application can use a single GPS physical position to nd the closest ....
Barry Brumitt, John Krumm, B. Meyers, and S. Shafer. Ubiquitous computing and the role of geometry. In Special Issue on Smart Spaces and Environments, volume 7-5, pages 41-43. IEEE Personal Communications, October 2000.
....great for find the room style operations. One solution used by the EasyLiving team at Microsoft Research is an abstraction layer merging the real time error distributions with an external database of room volumes and geometric service regions of objects to obtain relevant symbolic information [3]. In the distillation process, much of the error may be eliminated or deemed irrelevant. 6 5 Conclusion We have shown how real time error distributions can be an e#ective summarization of location system accuracy and are useful in applications, simulation, and sensor fusion. Our current work ....
Barry Brumitt, John Krumm, B. Meyers, and S. Shafer. Ubiquitous computing and the role of geometry. In Special Issue on Smart Spaces and Environments, volume 7-5, pages 41--43. IEEE Personal Communications, October 2000.
....symbolic location information with additional information, infrastructure, or both. For example, a laptop equipped with a GPS receiver can access a separate database that contains the positions and geometric service regions of other objects to provide applications with symbolic information [7]. Linking real time train positions to the reservation and ticketing database can help locate a passenger on a train. Applications can also use the physical position to determine a range of symbolic information. For example, one application can use a single GPS physical position to find the ....
Barry Brumitt, John Krumm, B. Meyers, and S. Shafer. Ubiquitous computing and the role of geometry. In Special Issue on Smart Spaces and Environments, volume 7-5, pages 41--43. IEEE Personal Communications, October 2000.
....symbolic location information with additional information, infrastructure, or both. For example, a laptop equipped with a GPS receiver can access a separate database that contains the positions and geometric service regions of other objects to provide applications with symbolic information [6]. Linking real time train positions to the reservation and ticketing database can help locate a passenger on a train. Applications can also use the physical position to determine a range of symbolic information. For example, one application can use a single GPS physical position to find the ....
Barry Brumitt, John Krumm, B. Meyers, and S. Shafer. Ubiquitous computing and the role of geometry. In Special Issue on Smart Spaces and Environments, volume 7-5, pages 41--43. IEEE Personal Communications, October 2000.
No context found.
Brumitt, B., et al. Ubiquitous Computing and the Role of Geometry. In IEEE Personal Communications, August 2000.
No context found.
Brumitt, B., et al. Ubiquitous computing and the role of geometry. IEEE Pers. Commun. 2000, 7 (5).
No context found.
B. Brumitt et al., "Ubiquitous Computing and the Role of Geometry," IEEE Personal Comm., Oct. 2000, pp. 41-43.
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