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Teaching mobile computing and mobile security

2016 IEEE Frontiers in Education Conference (FIE), 2016
Due to the popularity of mobile devices, it is important to teach mobile computing and security to students in colleges and universities. This paper describes eight course modules on mobile computing and security we developed that could be integrated into a computer science curriculum. These course modules were presented at a faculty workshop. Workshop
Xiaohong Yuan   +10 more
openaire   +1 more source

Mobile Computing to Go

IEEE Concurrency, 1999
This mobility track aims to look at mobile computing--not just in the narrow sense of portable access to favorite applications and systems, but also in the sense of how it can help people and machines on the move. Mobile computing has arrived, but as with the rest of computing, it evolves as technology progresses.
openaire   +1 more source

Mobile Computing Middleware

2002
Recent advances in wireless networking technologies and the growing success of mobile computing devices, such as laptop computers, third generation mobile phones, personal digital assistants, watches and the like, are enabling new classes of applications that present challenging problems to designers.
Cecilia Mascolo   +2 more
openaire   +1 more source

Mobile computing - A green computing resource

2013 IEEE Wireless Communications and Networking Conference (WCNC), 2013
Cloud computing provides an approach to accessing shared computing resources. However, a traditional cloud is composed of powerful but energy-hungry workstations. The growth of the population of mobile devices such as smart phones and tablets provides huge amount of idling computing power.
He Ba   +3 more
openaire   +1 more source

Mobile Entertainment Computing

2004
Constraints in hardware and context of use result in specific requirements for the design of successful mobile entertainment applications. To be successful, mobile games must differ in their gameplay to support intermittent use ”on the move”, the game presentation must be adapted to the limited output modalities of mobile devices and the interaction ...
Christian Geiger 0001   +2 more
openaire   +1 more source

Mobile Computers as Scientific Computing Machines

2014 IEEE Intl Conf on High Performance Computing and Communications, 2014 IEEE 6th Intl Symp on Cyberspace Safety and Security, 2014 IEEE 11th Intl Conf on Embedded Software and Syst (HPCC,CSS,ICESS), 2014
As pervasive mobile computing becomes more of areality the question arises whether a mobile device such as atablet can be sufficient to serve as the sole personal computingdevice of a scientist. To this end the performance of an Androidbased tablet computer is compared to that of a Notebook.
W. A. Smit, Ben M. Herbst
openaire   +1 more source

Mobile human-computer interaction

CHI '14 Extended Abstracts on Human Factors in Computing Systems, 2014
The objective of this course is to provide newcomers to Mobile Human-Computer Interaction (Mobile HCI) with an overview of the field. The course will introduce the five grand challenges of Mobile HCI that set this field apart from others and will discuss eight current Mobile HCI research areas that address those challenges.
Niels Henze, Enrico Rukzio
openaire   +1 more source

Mobile Computations and Trust

1998
From a security perspective, the most relevant attribute of mobile computations is that they can cross security domain boundaries. This is important since security policies and mechanisms are often location-sensitive. When boundaries are crossed, trust relationships can change and hence trust decisions can no longer be made statically.
openaire   +1 more source

Itinerant Agents for Mobile Computing

IEEE Communications Surveys & Tutorials, 1995
Describes a framework for itinerant agents that can be used to implement secure, remote applications in large, public networks such as the Internet or the IBM Global Network. Itinerant agents are programs, dispatched from a source computer, that roam among a set of networked servers until they accomplish their task.
David M. Chess   +5 more
openaire   +1 more source

Mobile Computing

2006
Mobile communications and computing has changed forever the way people communicate and interact and it has made “any information, any device, any network, anytime, anywhere” an everyday reality which we all take for granted. This chapter discusses the main research and development in the mobile technology and standards that made ubiquity a reality ...
Anastasis A. Sofokleous   +1 more
openaire   +1 more source

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