3 research outputs found
Implementing an Agent Trade Server
An experimental server for stock trading autonomous agents is presented and
made available, together with an agent shell for swift development. The server,
written in Java, was implemented as proof-of-concept for an agent trade server
for a real financial exchange.Comment: 14 pages, 7 figures, intended for B/W printin
A Design Rationale for Pervasive Computing - User Experience, Contextual Change, and Technical Requirements
The vision of pervasive computing promises a shift from information
technology per se to what can be accomplished by using it, thereby
fundamentally changing the relationship between people and information
technology. In order to realize this vision, a large number of issues
concerning user experience, contextual change, and technical
requirements should be addressed. We provide a design rationale for
pervasive computing that encompasses these issues, in which we argue
that a prominent aspect of user experience is to provide user control,
primarily founded in human values. As one of the more significant
aspects of the user experience, we provide an extended discussion about
privacy. With contextual change, we address the fundamental change in
previously established relationships between the practices of
individuals, social institutions, and physical environments that
pervasive computing entails. Finally, issues of technical requirements
refer to technology neutrality and openness--factors that we argue are
fundamental for realizing pervasive computing.
We describe a number of empirical and technical studies, the results of
which have helped to verify aspects of the design rationale as well as
shaping new aspects of it. The empirical studies include an
ethnographic-inspired study focusing on information technology support
for everyday activities, a study based on structured interviews
concerning relationships between contexts of use and everyday planning
activities, and a focus group study of laypeople’s interpretations of
the concept of privacy in relation to information technology. The first
technical study concerns the model of personal service environments as a
means for addressing a number of challenges concerning user experience,
contextual change, and technical requirements. Two other technical
studies relate to a model for device-independent service development and
the wearable server as a means to address issues of continuous usage
experience and technology neutrality respectively