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|[http://rfid.cs.washington.edu RFID Ecosystem] is a large-scale project (100s of readers, 1000s of tags) with participants from various research groups at UW CSE. Where past research with RFID in pervasive computing has been limited to short-term technology and user studies in restricted scenarios, the RFID Ecosystem will provide a living laboratory for long-term, in-depth research in applications, privacy, security, and systems. | |[http://rfid.cs.washington.edu RFID Ecosystem] is a large-scale project (100s of readers, 1000s of tags) with participants from various research groups at UW CSE. Where past research with RFID in pervasive computing has been limited to short-term technology and user studies in restricted scenarios, the RFID Ecosystem will provide a living laboratory for long-term, in-depth research in applications, privacy, security, and systems. | ||
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|[http://cam.cs.washington.edu CAM | |[http://cam.cs.washington.edu CAM Framework] is a mobile document processing system in which a camera phone is used as an image capture and data entry device. The system is able to process paper forms containing CamShell programs -- embedded instructions that are decoded from an electronic image. By combining 1) paper, 2) audio, 3) numeric data entry, 4) narrative scripted execution and 5) asynchronous connectivity, CAM is well-suited for an important set of users and applications in the developing world. We are currently porting CAM to Nokia S60v3 phones and adding sensing. | ||
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|[http://www.intel.com/research/exploratory/phone_system_interface.htm Phone System Interface (PSI)] board is a flexible prototyping board that interfaces to commercial Linux phones using the standard SD slot. PSI's expansion capabilities includes a module which allows the device to scan tags and enabling bidirectional near–field communication (NFC) with other mobile devices. We are currently exploring the interactions that NFC can enable. | |[http://www.intel.com/research/exploratory/phone_system_interface.htm Phone System Interface (PSI)] board is a flexible prototyping board that interfaces to commercial Linux phones using the standard SD slot. PSI's expansion capabilities includes a module which allows the device to scan tags and enabling bidirectional near–field communication (NFC) with other mobile devices. We are currently exploring the interactions that NFC can enable. | ||
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! <h2 style="margin:0;background-color:#cedff2;font-size:130%;font-weight:bold;border:1px solid #dddddd;text-align:left;color:#000;padding:0.2em 0.4em;"> Publications </h2> | ! | ||
<h2 style="margin:0;background-color:#cedff2;font-size:130%;font-weight:bold;border:1px solid #dddddd;text-align:left;color:#000;padding:0.2em 0.4em;"> Publications </h2> | |||
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| [http://cs.washington.edu/homes/yanokwa/papers/anokwa_mobiscopesmag.pdf Mobiscopes for Human Spaces]<br />Tarek Abdelzaher, Yaw Anokwa, Peter Boda, Jeff Burke, Deborah Estrin, Leonidas Guibas, Aman Kansal, Sam Madden, Jim Reich. In IEEE Pervasive, April 2007. | | [http://cs.washington.edu/homes/yanokwa/papers/anokwa_mobiscopesmag.pdf Mobiscopes for Human Spaces]<br />Tarek Abdelzaher, Yaw Anokwa, Peter Boda, Jeff Burke, Deborah Estrin, Leonidas Guibas, Aman Kansal, Sam Madden, Jim Reich. In IEEE Pervasive, April 2007. |
Revision as of 20:38, 25 April 2007
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