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The Landscape of Pervasive Computing Standards

Research output: Book/Report/ProceedingsBook

Published

Standard

The Landscape of Pervasive Computing Standards. / Helal, Sumi.
San Rafael, Calif.: Morgan and Claypool, 2010. 101 p. (Synthesis lectures on mobile and pervasive computing; Vol. 7).

Research output: Book/Report/ProceedingsBook

Harvard

Helal, S 2010, The Landscape of Pervasive Computing Standards. Synthesis lectures on mobile and pervasive computing, vol. 7, Morgan and Claypool, San Rafael, Calif. https://doi.org/10.2200/S00267ED1V01Y201004MPC007

APA

Helal, S. (2010). The Landscape of Pervasive Computing Standards. (Synthesis lectures on mobile and pervasive computing; Vol. 7). Morgan and Claypool. https://doi.org/10.2200/S00267ED1V01Y201004MPC007

Vancouver

Helal S. The Landscape of Pervasive Computing Standards. San Rafael, Calif.: Morgan and Claypool, 2010. 101 p. (Synthesis lectures on mobile and pervasive computing). doi: 10.2200/S00267ED1V01Y201004MPC007

Author

Helal, Sumi. / The Landscape of Pervasive Computing Standards. San Rafael, Calif. : Morgan and Claypool, 2010. 101 p. (Synthesis lectures on mobile and pervasive computing).

Bibtex

@book{aa1138679f144aeaa56c13c648a6068c,
title = "The Landscape of Pervasive Computing Standards",
abstract = "This lecture presents a first compendium of established and emerging standards in pervasive computing systems. The lecture explains the role of each of the covered standards and explains the relationship and interplay among them. Hopefully, the lecture will help piece together the various standards into a sensible and clear landscape. The lecture is a digest, reorganization, and a compilation of several short articles that have been published in the {\^a}€{\oe}Standards and Emerging Technologies{\^a}€ department of the IEEE Pervasive Computing magazine. The articles have been edited and shortened or expanded to provide the necessary focus and uniform coverage depth. There are more standards and common practices in pervasive systems than the lecture could cover. However, systems perspective and programmability of pervasive spaces, which are the main foci of the lecture, set the scope and determined which standards should be included. The lecture explains what it means to program a pervasive space and introduces the new requirements brought about by pervasive computing. Among the standards the lecture covers are sensors and device standards, service-oriented device standards, service discovery and delivery standards, service gateway standards, and standards for universal interactions with pervasive spaces. In addition, the emerging sensor platform and domestic robots technologies are covered and their essential new roles explained. The lecture also briefly covers a set of standards that represents an ecosystem for the emerging pervasive healthcare industry. Audiences who may benefit from this lecture include (1) academic and industrial researchers working on sensor-based, pervasive, or ubiquitous computing R and D; (2) system integrator consultants and firms, especially those concerned with integrating sensors, actuators, and devices to their enterprise and business systems; (3) device, smart chips, and sensor manufacturers; (4) government agencies; (5) the healthcare IT and pervasive health industries; and (6) other industries such as logistics, manufacturing, and the emerging smart grid and environment sustainability industries. Copyright {\textcopyright} 2010 by Morgan & Claypool.",
keywords = "pervasive computing middleware, pervasive computing standards, programmable pervasive spaces, sensor platforms, universal interaction in pervasive spaces, Pervasive computing, Pervasive space, Programmable pervasive spaces, Sensor platform, Industry, Integration, Middleware, Sensors, Service oriented architecture (SOA), Standards, Ubiquitous computing",
author = "Sumi Helal",
year = "2010",
month = jun,
doi = "10.2200/S00267ED1V01Y201004MPC007",
language = "English",
isbn = "9781598299267",
series = "Synthesis lectures on mobile and pervasive computing",
publisher = "Morgan and Claypool",

}

RIS

TY - BOOK

T1 - The Landscape of Pervasive Computing Standards

AU - Helal, Sumi

PY - 2010/6

Y1 - 2010/6

N2 - This lecture presents a first compendium of established and emerging standards in pervasive computing systems. The lecture explains the role of each of the covered standards and explains the relationship and interplay among them. Hopefully, the lecture will help piece together the various standards into a sensible and clear landscape. The lecture is a digest, reorganization, and a compilation of several short articles that have been published in the “Standards and Emerging Technologies†department of the IEEE Pervasive Computing magazine. The articles have been edited and shortened or expanded to provide the necessary focus and uniform coverage depth. There are more standards and common practices in pervasive systems than the lecture could cover. However, systems perspective and programmability of pervasive spaces, which are the main foci of the lecture, set the scope and determined which standards should be included. The lecture explains what it means to program a pervasive space and introduces the new requirements brought about by pervasive computing. Among the standards the lecture covers are sensors and device standards, service-oriented device standards, service discovery and delivery standards, service gateway standards, and standards for universal interactions with pervasive spaces. In addition, the emerging sensor platform and domestic robots technologies are covered and their essential new roles explained. The lecture also briefly covers a set of standards that represents an ecosystem for the emerging pervasive healthcare industry. Audiences who may benefit from this lecture include (1) academic and industrial researchers working on sensor-based, pervasive, or ubiquitous computing R and D; (2) system integrator consultants and firms, especially those concerned with integrating sensors, actuators, and devices to their enterprise and business systems; (3) device, smart chips, and sensor manufacturers; (4) government agencies; (5) the healthcare IT and pervasive health industries; and (6) other industries such as logistics, manufacturing, and the emerging smart grid and environment sustainability industries. Copyright © 2010 by Morgan & Claypool.

AB - This lecture presents a first compendium of established and emerging standards in pervasive computing systems. The lecture explains the role of each of the covered standards and explains the relationship and interplay among them. Hopefully, the lecture will help piece together the various standards into a sensible and clear landscape. The lecture is a digest, reorganization, and a compilation of several short articles that have been published in the “Standards and Emerging Technologies†department of the IEEE Pervasive Computing magazine. The articles have been edited and shortened or expanded to provide the necessary focus and uniform coverage depth. There are more standards and common practices in pervasive systems than the lecture could cover. However, systems perspective and programmability of pervasive spaces, which are the main foci of the lecture, set the scope and determined which standards should be included. The lecture explains what it means to program a pervasive space and introduces the new requirements brought about by pervasive computing. Among the standards the lecture covers are sensors and device standards, service-oriented device standards, service discovery and delivery standards, service gateway standards, and standards for universal interactions with pervasive spaces. In addition, the emerging sensor platform and domestic robots technologies are covered and their essential new roles explained. The lecture also briefly covers a set of standards that represents an ecosystem for the emerging pervasive healthcare industry. Audiences who may benefit from this lecture include (1) academic and industrial researchers working on sensor-based, pervasive, or ubiquitous computing R and D; (2) system integrator consultants and firms, especially those concerned with integrating sensors, actuators, and devices to their enterprise and business systems; (3) device, smart chips, and sensor manufacturers; (4) government agencies; (5) the healthcare IT and pervasive health industries; and (6) other industries such as logistics, manufacturing, and the emerging smart grid and environment sustainability industries. Copyright © 2010 by Morgan & Claypool.

KW - pervasive computing middleware

KW - pervasive computing standards

KW - programmable pervasive spaces

KW - sensor platforms

KW - universal interaction in pervasive spaces

KW - Pervasive computing

KW - Pervasive space

KW - Programmable pervasive spaces

KW - Sensor platform

KW - Industry

KW - Integration

KW - Middleware

KW - Sensors

KW - Service oriented architecture (SOA)

KW - Standards

KW - Ubiquitous computing

U2 - 10.2200/S00267ED1V01Y201004MPC007

DO - 10.2200/S00267ED1V01Y201004MPC007

M3 - Book

SN - 9781598299267

T3 - Synthesis lectures on mobile and pervasive computing

BT - The Landscape of Pervasive Computing Standards

PB - Morgan and Claypool

CY - San Rafael, Calif.

ER -