Top Banner
Pervasive Computing Dr Andy Hunt Electronics Dept, University of York
16

Intro Pervasive Computing - York · Principles of Pervasive Computing 1990s: Mark Weiser (Xerox PARC) First to talk about Ubiquitous Computing Weiser’s principles (source Wikipedia)

Apr 18, 2020

Download

Documents

dariahiddleston
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Intro Pervasive Computing - York · Principles of Pervasive Computing 1990s: Mark Weiser (Xerox PARC) First to talk about Ubiquitous Computing Weiser’s principles (source Wikipedia)

Pervasive Computing

Dr Andy HuntElectronics Dept, University of York

Page 2: Intro Pervasive Computing - York · Principles of Pervasive Computing 1990s: Mark Weiser (Xerox PARC) First to talk about Ubiquitous Computing Weiser’s principles (source Wikipedia)

What’s in this room ?

� Anything electronic

� which processes information

� Typically we find . . .� Mobile Phones

� PDAs

� Clever Watches

� Laptop computers

� Games consoles

� Mp3 players

� Any other info processing devices?

Page 3: Intro Pervasive Computing - York · Principles of Pervasive Computing 1990s: Mark Weiser (Xerox PARC) First to talk about Ubiquitous Computing Weiser’s principles (source Wikipedia)

What else is here?

� Passive information storage

� Bank cards with chip-&-pin

� Products with RFID tag

� Anyone got a device inside?� Anyone got a device inside?

� Pacemaker

� Diabetic insulin release.

Hitachi’s 0.4mm2 RFID tag

Page 4: Intro Pervasive Computing - York · Principles of Pervasive Computing 1990s: Mark Weiser (Xerox PARC) First to talk about Ubiquitous Computing Weiser’s principles (source Wikipedia)

Assignment: Topics

� Group 1: Wearable computing:

current technology and future trends

� Group 2: Technology convergence:

the future of the mobile phone / PDA / TV etc.

� Group 3: User interfaces of the future

� Group 4: Wireless connectivity: technical issues in an increasingly wireless world

� Group 5: Future integration of the Internet

and Pervasive Computing applications

Page 5: Intro Pervasive Computing - York · Principles of Pervasive Computing 1990s: Mark Weiser (Xerox PARC) First to talk about Ubiquitous Computing Weiser’s principles (source Wikipedia)

Pervasive Computing

History and Key Topics

Dr Andy HuntElectronics Dept, University of York

Page 6: Intro Pervasive Computing - York · Principles of Pervasive Computing 1990s: Mark Weiser (Xerox PARC) First to talk about Ubiquitous Computing Weiser’s principles (source Wikipedia)

Session overview

� History of Computing Development

� Earliest computing technology

� Main phases of development

� Where we are now� Where we are now

� Principles of Pervasive Computing

� Main features of devices & networks

� Topics covered by books & journals.

Page 7: Intro Pervasive Computing - York · Principles of Pervasive Computing 1990s: Mark Weiser (Xerox PARC) First to talk about Ubiquitous Computing Weiser’s principles (source Wikipedia)

Energy processing

� Humans used own energy� Helped by animals

� and devices

� Industrial revolution� Industrial revolution� Energy was harnessed

� or generated (e.g. steam engines)

� Expanding human physical power

� In specific locations.

Page 8: Intro Pervasive Computing - York · Principles of Pervasive Computing 1990s: Mark Weiser (Xerox PARC) First to talk about Ubiquitous Computing Weiser’s principles (source Wikipedia)

Energy processing (2)

� Energy decentralised� Power stations

� National Grid – distributed power

� Individual engines – mobility

� Energy made pervasive� Energy made pervasive� Application-driven devices

� Battery power

� Miniaturisation.

Page 9: Intro Pervasive Computing - York · Principles of Pervasive Computing 1990s: Mark Weiser (Xerox PARC) First to talk about Ubiquitous Computing Weiser’s principles (source Wikipedia)

Information processing

� Humans used own brainpower� Helped by paper

� and devices

� Computer revolution� Computer revolution� Information was harnessed

� Expanding human mental power

� In specific location

� 1940s: IBM president

1946: ENIAC: Electronic Numerical

Integrator and Computer

I think there is a

world market for

about five

computers.

Thomas J WatsonMAINFRAME

ERA

Page 10: Intro Pervasive Computing - York · Principles of Pervasive Computing 1990s: Mark Weiser (Xerox PARC) First to talk about Ubiquitous Computing Weiser’s principles (source Wikipedia)

Information Processing (2)

� Computing Decentralised

� Bill Gates (early 1970s)

� PCs

Laptops

IBM 360 mid 1960s

PERSONAL

COMPUTING

ERA

� Laptops PDP-11: early 1970s

IBM PC (DOS) 1981

Sub-notebooks mid-2000s IBM PC Convertible 1986One Laptop per Child: 2007

Wireless

Self-powered

Multimedia

Rugged

< £70

A computer on

every desktop and

in every home

ERA

Page 11: Intro Pervasive Computing - York · Principles of Pervasive Computing 1990s: Mark Weiser (Xerox PARC) First to talk about Ubiquitous Computing Weiser’s principles (source Wikipedia)

Information Processing (3)

� Devices which do not looklike computers, but :� Process data

� Store information

Connect to:

PERVASIVE

COMPUTING� Connect to:

� Other devices

� and/or the Internet

� Pervasive Computing� Focus on the application

� Often portable, low-power, connected.

COMPUTING

ERA

Page 12: Intro Pervasive Computing - York · Principles of Pervasive Computing 1990s: Mark Weiser (Xerox PARC) First to talk about Ubiquitous Computing Weiser’s principles (source Wikipedia)

Computing Eras

� Mainframe� Many people, one computer

� Fixed, central location

� PC� PC� One person, one computer

� Fixed location, decentralised

� Pervasive (Ubiquitous)

� One person, many computers

� Mobile

Page 13: Intro Pervasive Computing - York · Principles of Pervasive Computing 1990s: Mark Weiser (Xerox PARC) First to talk about Ubiquitous Computing Weiser’s principles (source Wikipedia)

Principles of Pervasive Computing

� 1990s: Mark Weiser (Xerox PARC)

� First to talk about Ubiquitous Computing

� Weiser’s principles (source Wikipedia)

� The purpose of a computer is to help you do something else

The best computer is a quiet, invisible servant

Mark Weiser: 1952-99

� The best computer is a quiet, invisible servant

� The more you can do by intuition the smarter you are;-

the computer should extend your unconscious

� Technology should create calm.

� Please read “The Computer for the 21st Century” (1991)

http://www.ubiq.com/hypertext/weiser/SciAmDraft3.html

� More information here: http://www-sul.stanford.edu/weiser/

Page 14: Intro Pervasive Computing - York · Principles of Pervasive Computing 1990s: Mark Weiser (Xerox PARC) First to talk about Ubiquitous Computing Weiser’s principles (source Wikipedia)

Principles of Pervasive Computing (2)

� Decentralisation� Local or mobile devices

� Information is ‘networked’

� Diversification� Specialised tasks

• Laptop

• Mobile phone

• Games console� Specialised tasks

� e.g. Internet access on

� Connectivity� Data exchanged between devices

� Wireless connection / internet

� Simplicity� Seamless interfaces, intuitive, calm.

• Games console

• Palm PDA

Page 15: Intro Pervasive Computing - York · Principles of Pervasive Computing 1990s: Mark Weiser (Xerox PARC) First to talk about Ubiquitous Computing Weiser’s principles (source Wikipedia)

What should I be reading / viewing?

� Google! – search also for “Ubiquitous Computing”

� YouTube � Lots of info posted from 2006

� Everyware- The dawning age of ubiquitous computing� Everyware- The dawning age of ubiquitous computing

� http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RMXox8IJvmE

� 8-part talk by Adam Greenfield

� Covers history, principles, devices, discussion of future

� Course Books (library)

http://www.computer.org/portal/site/pervasive/

Page 16: Intro Pervasive Computing - York · Principles of Pervasive Computing 1990s: Mark Weiser (Xerox PARC) First to talk about Ubiquitous Computing Weiser’s principles (source Wikipedia)

Summary

� Pervasive Computing� History

� Topics

� Principles

Assignment� Assignment� Meet in your groups

� Start discussing your topic & management

� Next Time

� Human-Computer Interaction.