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Ubiquitous Mobile Information and Collaboration Systems [electronic resource] : Second CAiSE Workshop, UMICS 2004, Riga, Latvia, June 7-8, 2004, Revised Selected Papers / edited by Luciano Baresi, Schahram Dustdar, Harald C. Gall, Maristella Matera.

Por: Colaborador(es): Tipo de material: TextoTextoSeries Lecture Notes in Computer Science ; 3272 | Lecture Notes in Computer Science ; 3272Editor: Berlin, Heidelberg : Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2005Descripción: VIII, 197 p. Also available online. online resourceTipo de contenido:
  • text
Tipo de medio:
  • computer
Tipo de soporte:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9783540301882
Trabajos contenidos:
  • SpringerLink (Online service)
Tema(s): Formatos físicos adicionales: Sin títuloClasificación CDD:
  • 005.7 23
Clasificación LoC:
  • QA76.76.A65
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Contenidos:
Springer eBooksResumen: Over recent years most business processes have changed in various dimensions (e. g. , ?exibility, interconnectivity, coordination style, autonomy) due to market conditions, organizational models, and usage scenarios of information systems. Frequently, inf- mationisrelocatedwithinageographicallydistributedsystemaccordingtorulesthatare only seldom de?ned as a well-codi?ed business process. This creates the need for a so- ware infrastructure that enables ubiquitous mobile and collaboration systems (UMICS). The anywhere/anytime/any means paradigm is becoming the major challenge in conceiving, designing, and releasing next-generation information systems. New te- nologies, like wi-? networks and 3rd-generation mobile phones, are offering the infr- tructure to conceive of information systems as ubiquitous information systems, that is, systems that are accessible from anywhere, at any time, and with any device. Ubiquity is not yet another buzzword pushed by emerging technologies, but is mainly a means to support new business models and encourage new ways of working. This new wave of UMICS will exploit the knowledge developed and deployed for conventional infor- tion systems, but will also need new concepts, models, methodologies, and supporting technologies to fully exploit the potentials of the enabling infrastructure and to be ready for the challenge. Moreover, people need to move across organizational boundaries and collaborate with others within an organization as well as between organizations. The ability to query the companys distributed knowledge base and to cooperate with co-workers is still a requirement, but mobility brings new access scenarios and higher complexity.
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Invited Talk -- Paper on the Move -- Data and Context Management -- A Natural Language Model for Managing TV-Anytime Information in Mobile Environments -- Updated Data Dissemination in Ad Hoc Networks -- Modelling Context for Information Environments -- Coordination and Control -- Distributed Task Processing Within the Mobile Memory Aid System MEMOS -- Towards an Approach for Coordinating Personalized Composite Services in an Environment of Mobile Users -- Workflow Management in Mobile Environments -- Application Frameworks (I) -- DIWE: A Framework for Constructing Device-Independent Web Applications -- A Conceptual Framework for Monitoring and Control System Development -- Process Modeling -- Evolution of Mobile Services: An Analysis of Current Architectures with Prospect to Future -- Collaborative Design of Web Service Networks in a Multilingual User Community -- Application Frameworks (II) -- Process Mining for Ubiquitous Mobile Systems: An Overview and a Concrete Algorithm -- Activity-Based Support for Mobility and Collaboration in Ubiquitous Computing -- Component-Based Development of Web-Enabled eHome Services.

Over recent years most business processes have changed in various dimensions (e. g. , ?exibility, interconnectivity, coordination style, autonomy) due to market conditions, organizational models, and usage scenarios of information systems. Frequently, inf- mationisrelocatedwithinageographicallydistributedsystemaccordingtorulesthatare only seldom de?ned as a well-codi?ed business process. This creates the need for a so- ware infrastructure that enables ubiquitous mobile and collaboration systems (UMICS). The anywhere/anytime/any means paradigm is becoming the major challenge in conceiving, designing, and releasing next-generation information systems. New te- nologies, like wi-? networks and 3rd-generation mobile phones, are offering the infr- tructure to conceive of information systems as ubiquitous information systems, that is, systems that are accessible from anywhere, at any time, and with any device. Ubiquity is not yet another buzzword pushed by emerging technologies, but is mainly a means to support new business models and encourage new ways of working. This new wave of UMICS will exploit the knowledge developed and deployed for conventional infor- tion systems, but will also need new concepts, models, methodologies, and supporting technologies to fully exploit the potentials of the enabling infrastructure and to be ready for the challenge. Moreover, people need to move across organizational boundaries and collaborate with others within an organization as well as between organizations. The ability to query the companys distributed knowledge base and to cooperate with co-workers is still a requirement, but mobility brings new access scenarios and higher complexity.

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