This paper explores ubicomp as a configuration that comprises three key figures: ubiquitous computing as a name and a term, Mark Weiser who came to be identified as the father of ubiquitous computing, and finally the temporalities folded within ubicomp’s ‘vision’; all three figures tightly interwoven under the phrase, Weiser’s vision of ubiquitous computing. By unpacking each figure and exposing the processes that hold ubicomp together, this paper makes visible the frictions and contradictions that ubicomp folds within it, while, at the same time, it attends to the practices that help the whole configuration to circulate, become dominant and productive. The aim is to destabilise and denaturalise the reductive dominance of ubicomp’s origin s...
The rapid growth of the Ubicomp field has recently raised concerns regarding its identity. These con...
<E-213> Ubiquitous computing (ubicomp) is an emerging paradigm for interaction between people...
Intimacy need not be located in specific technologies or in the relationships they afford, but may b...
1 Reflection on the state of the art It has been 15 years since Weiser’s seminal article captured th...
• The term ubiquitous, meaning appearing or existing everywhere, combined with computing forms the t...
"…a must-read text that provides a historical lens to see how ubicomp has matured into a multidiscip...
Weiser's landmark Scientific American article inspired many researchers to explore an exciting ...
Ubiquitous computing (ubicomp) is a compelling vision for how people will interact with multiple com...
Computer technology continuously advances and it enters people’s lives more and more as they get bet...
In this paper we propose a new approach to the design of ubiquitous computing (ubicomp) systems. One...
In this paper, the accepted submissions published on Handheld and Ubiquitous Computing (HUC) and Ubi...
. The proliferation ofcomputing into the physical world promises more than the ubiquitous availabili...
This retrospective on 20 years of ubiquitous computing research identifies opportunities for leverag...
In ‘The Coming Age of Calm Technology’, Mark Weiser and John Seely Brown are clear in their assertio...
Ubiquitous computing often presented as a third wave of computing, a departure from its predecessors...
The rapid growth of the Ubicomp field has recently raised concerns regarding its identity. These con...
<E-213> Ubiquitous computing (ubicomp) is an emerging paradigm for interaction between people...
Intimacy need not be located in specific technologies or in the relationships they afford, but may b...
1 Reflection on the state of the art It has been 15 years since Weiser’s seminal article captured th...
• The term ubiquitous, meaning appearing or existing everywhere, combined with computing forms the t...
"…a must-read text that provides a historical lens to see how ubicomp has matured into a multidiscip...
Weiser's landmark Scientific American article inspired many researchers to explore an exciting ...
Ubiquitous computing (ubicomp) is a compelling vision for how people will interact with multiple com...
Computer technology continuously advances and it enters people’s lives more and more as they get bet...
In this paper we propose a new approach to the design of ubiquitous computing (ubicomp) systems. One...
In this paper, the accepted submissions published on Handheld and Ubiquitous Computing (HUC) and Ubi...
. The proliferation ofcomputing into the physical world promises more than the ubiquitous availabili...
This retrospective on 20 years of ubiquitous computing research identifies opportunities for leverag...
In ‘The Coming Age of Calm Technology’, Mark Weiser and John Seely Brown are clear in their assertio...
Ubiquitous computing often presented as a third wave of computing, a departure from its predecessors...
The rapid growth of the Ubicomp field has recently raised concerns regarding its identity. These con...
<E-213> Ubiquitous computing (ubicomp) is an emerging paradigm for interaction between people...
Intimacy need not be located in specific technologies or in the relationships they afford, but may b...