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An Infopad Basestation
Interface using ANSI/IEEE 488.1-1987
Roy Allen Sutton
M.S. 1998 (advisor:
Jan Rabaey)
The fields of mobile computing and
wireless networking are rapidly merging to
form new classes of computing systems. Increased integrated circuit density is
driving developments in mobile
computing and providing more elaborate human inter-faces in
smaller system packages. This coupled with emerging protocol standards and
techniques for integrating heterogeneous
networks, with improved bandwidth management, provide
a platform for new applications. Un-tethered access to shared data sets,
information exchange amongst mobile users, real-time interaction over
large-areas, are just a few of the
types of services now possible. Anytime, anywhere access is
an emerging reality. Although much of the hardware infrastructure is in place,
work remains in the integration of these
complex meta-systems. Many low-level issues
still require optimization; such as efficient use of power, improved computation
efficiency,
more natural interfaces, and ergonomic designs. However, it is the higher
level integration which remains largely immature. Who controls adaptation
to changes in the environment? Where does the
computation occur when an application can
utilize both local and remote resources? How do we handle process migration
across network boundaries? How do we handle
connection management? How does this
change when the networks are dissimilar? These are just a few of the unresolved
issues.

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