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  • ...e be faster or stronger. Now we have the first time with mobile phones and computing devices that allow us to be mentally stronger and faster. Smartphones are a ...d there indefinitely, photos, videos, addresses. With the proliferation of mobile Internet, the mass of data we can access, even greater.
    7 KB (1,183 words) - 12:55, 6 November 2011
  • Steve Mann's wrote about Eyetap glasses that would turn dark when you were computing with them, and turn back transparent when you were ready to socially engage ...uld like to have that would motivate the use of glasses vs. the use of the mobile phone?
    12 KB (2,156 words) - 18:09, 28 August 2011
  • ==Operational modes of wearable computing== ...s that the user will be doing something else at the same time as doing the computing. Thus the computer should serve to augment the intellect, or augment the se
    5 KB (752 words) - 21:08, 29 October 2011
  • ...ts and failures in the mobile location industry far before the majority of mobile users had location capabilities on their phone. A report from O'Reilly and ...not a possibility. The Internet got in the way.<ref>Begole, Bo. Ubiquitous Computing for Business.</ref>
    3 KB (454 words) - 04:36, 28 December 2011
  • When I was doing research on mobile phones, I was trying to understand what made phones so compelling, and also ...about the coming “virtual reality” or those who talk about ubiquitous computing and other things. I’ve found that simply replacing “virtual reality”
    19 KB (3,331 words) - 13:03, 6 November 2011
  • ...at has so far changed in people’s relation towards technology? What have mobile phones and digital networks brought, respectively? Computing technologies help extend our mental capabilities. The physical world has a
    12 KB (2,091 words) - 13:04, 6 November 2011
  • 11 Affective Computing What we're really seeing is that everything is a button away. We are mobile, and we need just-in-time information. In our mothers' wombs, all things ca
    11 KB (1,670 words) - 21:17, 18 December 2011
  • [[image:olivetti-research-active-badge-wearable-computing.jpg|right|thumb|500px|David Greaves' Active Badge from his time at Cambridg ...cturer Olivetti in 1990. <ref>Rhodes, Bradley. A Brief History of Wearable Computing. http://www.media.mit.edu/wearables/lizzy/timeline.html#1990b</ref> for res
    2 KB (235 words) - 16:34, 27 January 2013
  • As computing devices were becoming more prevalent, Weiser and Brown realized that the co ...ual framework of '''ubiquitous computing''', the idea that electronics and computing capability would someday be so miniaturized as to go unnoticed while still
    6 KB (967 words) - 05:01, 9 December 2023

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