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iGrocer- A ubiquitous and pervasive smart grocery shopping system

Research output: Contribution in Book/Report/Proceedings - With ISBN/ISSNConference contribution/Paperpeer-review

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iGrocer- A ubiquitous and pervasive smart grocery shopping system. / Shekar, S.; Nair, P.; Helal, Sumi et al.
SAC '03 Proceedings of the 2003 ACM symposium on Applied computing. New York: ACM, 2003. p. 645-652.

Research output: Contribution in Book/Report/Proceedings - With ISBN/ISSNConference contribution/Paperpeer-review

Harvard

Shekar, S, Nair, P, Helal, S, G., L (ed.) & SIGAPP, ACM 2003, iGrocer- A ubiquitous and pervasive smart grocery shopping system. in SAC '03 Proceedings of the 2003 ACM symposium on Applied computing. ACM, New York, pp. 645-652. https://doi.org/10.1145/952532.952658

APA

Shekar, S., Nair, P., Helal, S., G., L. (Ed.), & SIGAPP, ACM. . (2003). iGrocer- A ubiquitous and pervasive smart grocery shopping system. In SAC '03 Proceedings of the 2003 ACM symposium on Applied computing (pp. 645-652). ACM. https://doi.org/10.1145/952532.952658

Vancouver

Shekar S, Nair P, Helal S, G. L, (ed.), SIGAPP ACM. iGrocer- A ubiquitous and pervasive smart grocery shopping system. In SAC '03 Proceedings of the 2003 ACM symposium on Applied computing. New York: ACM. 2003. p. 645-652 doi: 10.1145/952532.952658

Author

Shekar, S. ; Nair, P. ; Helal, Sumi et al. / iGrocer- A ubiquitous and pervasive smart grocery shopping system. SAC '03 Proceedings of the 2003 ACM symposium on Applied computing. New York : ACM, 2003. pp. 645-652

Bibtex

@inproceedings{2f703045048642f7bb48dd73b4655598,
title = "iGrocer- A ubiquitous and pervasive smart grocery shopping system",
abstract = "Emerging Smart phones are poised to give a whole new dimension to the way we shop, bank, and go about many of our everyday activities. iGrocer is a smart grocery shopping assistant, that re-defines grocery shopping. It is capable of maintaining nutrition profiles of its users. Particularly useful for elders and disabled shoppers, iGrocer can aid and advice users on what products to buy and what to avoid based on nutrition criteria and price constraints. Implemented on a smart phone with a barcode scanner accessory, iGrocer has a number of killer features that include: (1) ubiquitous shopping list: adding items to the shopping list by different means (e.g. simply scanning them when near empty, scanning and storing manufacturer coupons, planning the weekly menu right on the phone or through the web, and shopping for the necessary ingredient of a particular recipe, (2) quick and assisted in-store shopping: while shopping in the grocery store, iGrocer maps out the shortest shopping path with a map indicating the location of the next item on the list, and (3)automated check-out: iGrocer is capable of acting on behalf of the store and the customer to perform a trusted queue-less checkout. In this {"}application-oriented{"} paper, we present the iGrocer concept and give details of its architecture and implementation. We also summarize the lessons learnt throughout its development and testing phases.",
keywords = "Assistive devices, Mobile commerce, Pervasive computing, Smart phones, Ubiquitous computing, Information use, Product design, Wireless telecommunication systems, Electronic commerce",
author = "S. Shekar and P. Nair and Sumi Helal and Lamont G. and SIGAPP, {ACM /}",
note = "Conference code: 61151 Cited By :30 Export Date: 24 January 2018 Correspondence Address: Shekar, S.; Computer Engineering Department, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL 32611, United States; email: helal@cise.ufl.edu References: Jing, J., Helal, A., Elmagarmid, A., Client-server computing in mobile environments (1999) ACM Computing Surveys, 31 (2). , June; Mobile Information Device Profile (MIDP), , http://java.sun.com/products/midp; MotoSDK Wireless Toolkit, , https://idenonline.motorola.com/ideveloper/system/code.cfm; Food Processor, Version 7.7, , http://www.esha.com; Journal of The American Dietetic Association, , http://www.eatright.org; Schakel, S.F., Procedures for estimating nutrient values for food composition databases (1997) Journal of Food Composition and Analysis, 10 (2), pp. 102-114; http://www.nutribase.com; Foreman, G., A Grocery Price Book, , http://www.stretcher.com/stories/971013b.cfm; Americans are Creatures of Habit, , http://www.tupperware.com/company/headlines/news/habit.asp; Motorola i85s and i50sx Multi-Communication Device J2ME Developer's Guide",
year = "2003",
doi = "10.1145/952532.952658",
language = "English",
isbn = "1581136242",
pages = "645--652",
booktitle = "SAC '03 Proceedings of the 2003 ACM symposium on Applied computing",
publisher = "ACM",

}

RIS

TY - GEN

T1 - iGrocer- A ubiquitous and pervasive smart grocery shopping system

AU - Shekar, S.

AU - Nair, P.

AU - Helal, Sumi

AU - SIGAPP, ACM /

A2 - G., Lamont

N1 - Conference code: 61151 Cited By :30 Export Date: 24 January 2018 Correspondence Address: Shekar, S.; Computer Engineering Department, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL 32611, United States; email: helal@cise.ufl.edu References: Jing, J., Helal, A., Elmagarmid, A., Client-server computing in mobile environments (1999) ACM Computing Surveys, 31 (2). , June; Mobile Information Device Profile (MIDP), , http://java.sun.com/products/midp; MotoSDK Wireless Toolkit, , https://idenonline.motorola.com/ideveloper/system/code.cfm; Food Processor, Version 7.7, , http://www.esha.com; Journal of The American Dietetic Association, , http://www.eatright.org; Schakel, S.F., Procedures for estimating nutrient values for food composition databases (1997) Journal of Food Composition and Analysis, 10 (2), pp. 102-114; http://www.nutribase.com; Foreman, G., A Grocery Price Book, , http://www.stretcher.com/stories/971013b.cfm; Americans are Creatures of Habit, , http://www.tupperware.com/company/headlines/news/habit.asp; Motorola i85s and i50sx Multi-Communication Device J2ME Developer's Guide

PY - 2003

Y1 - 2003

N2 - Emerging Smart phones are poised to give a whole new dimension to the way we shop, bank, and go about many of our everyday activities. iGrocer is a smart grocery shopping assistant, that re-defines grocery shopping. It is capable of maintaining nutrition profiles of its users. Particularly useful for elders and disabled shoppers, iGrocer can aid and advice users on what products to buy and what to avoid based on nutrition criteria and price constraints. Implemented on a smart phone with a barcode scanner accessory, iGrocer has a number of killer features that include: (1) ubiquitous shopping list: adding items to the shopping list by different means (e.g. simply scanning them when near empty, scanning and storing manufacturer coupons, planning the weekly menu right on the phone or through the web, and shopping for the necessary ingredient of a particular recipe, (2) quick and assisted in-store shopping: while shopping in the grocery store, iGrocer maps out the shortest shopping path with a map indicating the location of the next item on the list, and (3)automated check-out: iGrocer is capable of acting on behalf of the store and the customer to perform a trusted queue-less checkout. In this "application-oriented" paper, we present the iGrocer concept and give details of its architecture and implementation. We also summarize the lessons learnt throughout its development and testing phases.

AB - Emerging Smart phones are poised to give a whole new dimension to the way we shop, bank, and go about many of our everyday activities. iGrocer is a smart grocery shopping assistant, that re-defines grocery shopping. It is capable of maintaining nutrition profiles of its users. Particularly useful for elders and disabled shoppers, iGrocer can aid and advice users on what products to buy and what to avoid based on nutrition criteria and price constraints. Implemented on a smart phone with a barcode scanner accessory, iGrocer has a number of killer features that include: (1) ubiquitous shopping list: adding items to the shopping list by different means (e.g. simply scanning them when near empty, scanning and storing manufacturer coupons, planning the weekly menu right on the phone or through the web, and shopping for the necessary ingredient of a particular recipe, (2) quick and assisted in-store shopping: while shopping in the grocery store, iGrocer maps out the shortest shopping path with a map indicating the location of the next item on the list, and (3)automated check-out: iGrocer is capable of acting on behalf of the store and the customer to perform a trusted queue-less checkout. In this "application-oriented" paper, we present the iGrocer concept and give details of its architecture and implementation. We also summarize the lessons learnt throughout its development and testing phases.

KW - Assistive devices

KW - Mobile commerce

KW - Pervasive computing

KW - Smart phones

KW - Ubiquitous computing

KW - Information use

KW - Product design

KW - Wireless telecommunication systems

KW - Electronic commerce

U2 - 10.1145/952532.952658

DO - 10.1145/952532.952658

M3 - Conference contribution/Paper

SN - 1581136242

SP - 645

EP - 652

BT - SAC '03 Proceedings of the 2003 ACM symposium on Applied computing

PB - ACM

CY - New York

ER -