Hesselman / Giannelli Mobile Wireless Middleware, Operating Systems and Applications - Workshops

Mobilware 2009 Workshops, Berlin, Germany, April 28-29, 2009, Revised Selected Papers
1. Auflage 2009
ISBN: 978-3-642-03569-2
Verlag: Springer
Format: PDF
Kopierschutz: 1 - PDF Watermark

Mobilware 2009 Workshops, Berlin, Germany, April 28-29, 2009, Revised Selected Papers

E-Book, Englisch, Band 12, 162 Seiten

Reihe: Lecture Notes of the Institute for Computer Sciences, Social Informatics and Telecommunications Engineering

ISBN: 978-3-642-03569-2
Verlag: Springer
Format: PDF
Kopierschutz: 1 - PDF Watermark



This book constitutes the thoroughly refereed post-workshop proceedings of the Second International Conference on MOBILe Wireless MiddleWARE, Mobilware 2009, held in Berlin, Germany, in April 2009. The 18 revised full papers presented were carefully reviewed and selected, the papers are organized in four different workshops: Ubi-Islands 2009, the first international workshop on interconnecting ubiquitous islands using mobile and next generation networks, WASP 2009, the first international workshop on wireless sensor networks architectures, simulation, and programming, UCPA 2009, the first international workshop on user-centric pervasive adaptation, and BMMP 2009, the first international workshop on business models for new mobile platforms. Two of this were purely technical, one a mixed technical/end user nature, and one focusing on business models.

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Weitere Infos & Material


1;Preface;5
2;Organization;7
3;Table of Contents;10
4;BMMP Workshop;10
4.1;“Just Another Distribution Channel?”;12
4.1.1;Introduction;12
4.1.2;The Development of the Industries;13
4.1.3;Analysis of Technological and Industry Developments;16
4.1.4;Discussion: Position of a Mobile Operator in the Content Industry;19
4.1.5;In Conclusion;22
4.1.6;References;23
4.2;Adding Value to the Network: Exploring the Software as a Service and Platform as a Service Models for Mobile Operators;24
4.2.1;Introduction;24
4.2.2;Software as a Service;25
4.2.2.1;Revenue Models;26
4.2.2.2;Benefits and Risks;26
4.2.3;Platform as a Service;27
4.2.3.1;Revenue Models;28
4.2.3.2;Benefits and Risks;28
4.2.4;Summary of Benefits and Risks;30
4.2.5;Analysis of Emerging Experiences of Mobile Operators’ Service Platforms;31
4.2.6;Conclusion;32
4.2.7;References;33
4.3;Business Model Evaluation for an Advanced Multimedia Service Portfolio;34
4.3.1;Introduction;34
4.3.2;Typical Business Scenes;35
4.3.3;Technical Analysis of the Service Portfolio Provision;36
4.3.3.1;System Architecture Design;36
4.3.3.2;System Architecture Approximation;37
4.3.4;Modelling the Collaborative Service Provision;39
4.3.5;Numerical Implementation;42
4.3.6;Conclusions and Future Work;43
4.3.7;References;43
4.4;Connecting Business Models with Service Platform Designs – Quantitative, Scenario-Based Framework;44
4.4.1;Introduction;44
4.4.2;Techno-Business Modeling Framework;45
4.4.2.1;Service Platform Approximate;46
4.4.2.2;Modeling Usage of Services and Enablers;47
4.4.2.3;Modeling Service Provision;49
4.4.3;Scenario-Based Analysis and Valuation;50
4.4.4;Practical Case – SPICE Mobile Service Platform;51
4.4.5;Conclusion;54
4.4.6;References;55
4.5;The Borders of Mobile Handset Ecosystems: Is Coopetition Inevitable?;56
4.5.1;Introduction;56
4.5.1.1;It’s All about Business Ecosystems;57
4.5.1.2;Is Exclusivity in Relationships Possible?;58
4.5.2;Methodological Approach;59
4.5.3;Findings;60
4.5.4;Conclusion;64
4.5.5;References;65
4.6;Trends in Mobile Application Development;66
4.6.1;Introduction;66
4.6.2;Current Practices;67
4.6.2.1;Development Tools;68
4.6.2.2;Portals;69
4.6.2.3;Platform Integration;69
4.6.3;Trends;70
4.6.3.1;Towards Portal Centralization;70
4.6.3.2;Towards Technological Openness;71
4.6.3.3;Towards Full Integration;71
4.6.4;Implications for Developers;72
4.6.4.1;Implications of Portal Centralization;73
4.6.4.2;Implications of Technological Openness;73
4.6.4.3;Implications of Platform Integration;73
4.6.4.4;Implication of the Platform Choice;74
4.6.5;Conclusion;74
4.6.6;References;75
5;WASP Workshop;10
5.1;A Middleware Architecture Supporting Native Mobile Agents for Wireless Sensor Networks;76
5.1.1;Introduction;76
5.1.2;System Architecture;77
5.1.2.1;Mobility Manager;77
5.1.2.2;Security Manager;78
5.1.2.3;Operation Manager;79
5.1.3;Evaluation;79
5.1.3.1;AvroraZ;79
5.1.3.2;Physical Scenario;79
5.1.3.3;Agents;80
5.1.3.4;Agent Middleware;80
5.1.3.5;Results;81
5.1.4;Significance and Discussion;82
5.1.4.1;Robustness and Self-management;82
5.1.4.2;Structure and Flexibility;82
5.1.4.3;Alternatives;82
5.1.5;Related Work;83
5.1.5.1;Stateless Interpreted;83
5.1.5.2;Stateless Native;84
5.1.5.3;Stateful Interpreted;84
5.1.6;Conclusion;84
5.1.7;References;85
5.2;Map-Based Compressive Sensing Model for Wireless Sensor Network Architecture, A Starting Point;86
5.2.1;Introduction;86
5.2.2;System Model;87
5.2.3;Compressive Sensing: Mathematical Basics and Applicability to WSN;87
5.2.3.1;Sparse and Compressible Signals;88
5.2.3.2;Incoherent Sparse Sampling and Recovery;89
5.2.3.3;CS Advantages and Its Application in WSN;90
5.2.4;CS-Oriented Map-Based (CSM) Architecture;90
5.2.5;Evaluation of CSM with an Exhaustive Algorithm;91
5.2.6;Related Work;93
5.2.7;Conclusion and Future Work;94
5.2.8;References;94
5.3;Mobility and Remote-Code Execution;96
5.3.1;Introduction;96
5.3.2;Abstraction, Model and Mechanism;97
5.3.3;The Remote-Code Execution Abstraction;99
5.3.3.1;Design Paradigms;99
5.3.3.2;Models of the Remote-Code Execution Abstraction;100
5.3.3.3;Discussion;104
5.3.4;From Models to RCE Mechanisms;104
5.3.4.1;Execution System;105
5.3.4.2;RCE Models Implementation;105
5.3.5;Conclusion;107
5.3.6;References;107
6;UCPA Workshop;10
6.1;A Component-Based Approach for Realizing User-Centric Adaptive Systems;109
6.1.1;Introduction;109
6.1.2;User-Centric Pervasive Adaptation;110
6.1.3;Realizing User-Centric Software;110
6.1.4;Example Scenario: Adaptive Interactive Installations;112
6.1.5;Related Work;114
6.1.6;Conclusion and Future Work;114
6.1.7;References;115
6.2;A Reflective Goal-Based System for Context-Aware Adaptation;116
6.2.1;Introduction;116
6.2.2;A Reflective User Goal-Based Context-Aware Framework;117
6.2.2.1;Contexts;117
6.2.2.2;Adaptation Layers;118
6.2.2.3;The Reflective Middleware;119
6.2.3;Application Trial and Discussion;120
6.2.4;Conclusion;121
6.2.5;References;121
6.3;Pervasive Adaptation in Car Crowds;122
6.3.1;Car Crowds as Socio-Technical Systems;122
6.3.1.1;Driver-Vehicle Co-Models;124
6.3.1.2;A Collective Driver-Vehicle Co-Model;126
6.3.2;Conclusions and Further Work;127
6.3.3;References;127
6.4;Developing User-Centric Applications with H-Omega;129
6.4.1;Introduction;129
6.4.2;Requirements and Background;130
6.4.2.1;Requirements for Successful Pervasive Computing;130
6.4.2.2;Service-Oriented Computing;131
6.4.3;H-Omega: An Application Server for Pervasive Applications;132
6.4.4;The Follow Media Application;133
6.4.5;Conclusion;134
6.4.6;References;134
6.5;Utilization Possibilities of Area Definition in User Space for User-Centric Pervasive-Adaptive Systems;135
6.5.1;Introduction;135
6.5.2;The PDPT Framework and PDPT Core;136
6.5.2.1;Predictive Data Push Technology;136
6.5.2.2;The PDPT Framework Design;137
6.5.2.3;PDPT Core – Static and Dynamic Area Definition;137
6.5.2.4;The PDPT Client Application and Testing Results;139
6.5.3;New Utilization Possibilities of Area Definition;140
6.5.4;Conclusions;141
6.5.5;References;141
7;Ubi-Islands Workshop;11
7.1;Architecture of a Personal Network Service Layer;142
7.1.1;Introduction;142
7.1.2;Architecture;143
7.1.3;Conclusions and Future Work;144
7.1.4;References;145
7.2;Connecting the Islands – Enabling Global Connectivity through Local Cooperation;146
7.2.1;Introduction;146
7.2.2;Cooperation;148
7.2.3;Network Coding;149
7.2.4;Challenges and Considerations;150
7.2.5;References;151
7.3;Mapping the Physical World into the VirtualWorld: A Com2monSense Approach;153
7.3.1;Introduction;153
7.3.2;Com2monSense;154
7.3.3;Implementation;155
7.3.4;Scenario: Smart Open Spaces;156
7.3.5;Conclusions;156
7.3.6;References;156
7.4;Ubiquitous Mobile Awareness from Sensor Networks;158
7.4.1;Introduction;158
7.4.2;Exchanging Sensor Information with 3GPP IMS;159
7.4.3;Ubiquitous Mobile Awareness Services;160
7.4.4;Conclusions;160
7.4.5;References;161
8;Author Index;162



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