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Moving the 'Desktop' Into the Field

Research output: Contribution to conference - Without ISBN/ISSN Conference paperpeer-review

Published

Standard

Moving the 'Desktop' Into the Field. / Cheverst, Keith; Blair, Gordon S.; Davies, Nigel et al.
1994. Paper presented at IEE Colloquim on Integrating Telecommunications and IT on the Desktop, Savoy Place, London, UK.

Research output: Contribution to conference - Without ISBN/ISSN Conference paperpeer-review

Harvard

Cheverst, K, Blair, GS, Davies, N, Friday, A, Cross, AD & Raven, PF 1994, 'Moving the 'Desktop' Into the Field', Paper presented at IEE Colloquim on Integrating Telecommunications and IT on the Desktop, Savoy Place, London, UK, 1/03/94. <http://www.comp.lancs.ac.uk/~adrian/Papers/cheverst-most-iee94.pdf>

APA

Cheverst, K., Blair, G. S., Davies, N., Friday, A., Cross, A. D., & Raven, P. F. (1994). Moving the 'Desktop' Into the Field. Paper presented at IEE Colloquim on Integrating Telecommunications and IT on the Desktop, Savoy Place, London, UK. http://www.comp.lancs.ac.uk/~adrian/Papers/cheverst-most-iee94.pdf

Vancouver

Cheverst K, Blair GS, Davies N, Friday A, Cross AD, Raven PF. Moving the 'Desktop' Into the Field. 1994. Paper presented at IEE Colloquim on Integrating Telecommunications and IT on the Desktop, Savoy Place, London, UK.

Author

Cheverst, Keith ; Blair, Gordon S. ; Davies, Nigel et al. / Moving the 'Desktop' Into the Field. Paper presented at IEE Colloquim on Integrating Telecommunications and IT on the Desktop, Savoy Place, London, UK.

Bibtex

@conference{12402a13b8b6423bb3490ec3cd514d42,
title = "Moving the 'Desktop' Into the Field",
abstract = "The electricty industry, as other utilities, is concerned with the management of large scale distribution networks. These networks have been developing for more than a century and the methods for operating them have changed over this time. For almost fifty years mobile communications have played an increasingly important role in the co-ordination of activities in the field. In more recent years, the industry has exploited IT with the result that a significant amount of mixed-media information is now held in computerised form. This information is available to office workers on their desktop. However, it is believed that substantial benefits could be accrued by making this information available to those workers who operate in the field, i.e. by moving the desktop into the field. This paper reports on the initial findings of the DTI/SERC supported MOST project which aims to produce a pilot system to demonstrate how mixed-media information can be exploited in the field using mobile computers and wide-area radio communications as enabling technologies.",
keywords = "cs_eprint_id, 1488 cs_uid, 352",
author = "Keith Cheverst and Blair, {Gordon S.} and Nigel Davies and Adrian Friday and Cross, {Andrew D.} and Raven, {Peter F.}",
year = "1994",
month = mar,
language = "English",
note = "IEE Colloquim on Integrating Telecommunications and IT on the Desktop ; Conference date: 01-03-1994",

}

RIS

TY - CONF

T1 - Moving the 'Desktop' Into the Field

AU - Cheverst, Keith

AU - Blair, Gordon S.

AU - Davies, Nigel

AU - Friday, Adrian

AU - Cross, Andrew D.

AU - Raven, Peter F.

PY - 1994/3

Y1 - 1994/3

N2 - The electricty industry, as other utilities, is concerned with the management of large scale distribution networks. These networks have been developing for more than a century and the methods for operating them have changed over this time. For almost fifty years mobile communications have played an increasingly important role in the co-ordination of activities in the field. In more recent years, the industry has exploited IT with the result that a significant amount of mixed-media information is now held in computerised form. This information is available to office workers on their desktop. However, it is believed that substantial benefits could be accrued by making this information available to those workers who operate in the field, i.e. by moving the desktop into the field. This paper reports on the initial findings of the DTI/SERC supported MOST project which aims to produce a pilot system to demonstrate how mixed-media information can be exploited in the field using mobile computers and wide-area radio communications as enabling technologies.

AB - The electricty industry, as other utilities, is concerned with the management of large scale distribution networks. These networks have been developing for more than a century and the methods for operating them have changed over this time. For almost fifty years mobile communications have played an increasingly important role in the co-ordination of activities in the field. In more recent years, the industry has exploited IT with the result that a significant amount of mixed-media information is now held in computerised form. This information is available to office workers on their desktop. However, it is believed that substantial benefits could be accrued by making this information available to those workers who operate in the field, i.e. by moving the desktop into the field. This paper reports on the initial findings of the DTI/SERC supported MOST project which aims to produce a pilot system to demonstrate how mixed-media information can be exploited in the field using mobile computers and wide-area radio communications as enabling technologies.

KW - cs_eprint_id

KW - 1488 cs_uid

KW - 352

M3 - Conference paper

T2 - IEE Colloquim on Integrating Telecommunications and IT on the Desktop

Y2 - 1 March 1994

ER -