RFID: An Ideal Technology for Ubiquitous Computing?
C. O’Driscoll, D. MacCormac, M. Deegan, F. Mtenzi, and B. O’Shea. Ubiquitous Intelligence and Computing, volume 5061 of Lecture Notes in Computer Science, Springer Berlin / Heidelberg, 10.1007/978-3-540-69293-5_39.(2008)
Abstract
This paper presents a review of RFID based approaches used for the development of smart spaces and smart objects. We explore approaches that enable RFID technology to make the transition from the recognized applications such as retail to ubiquitous computing, in which computers and technology fade into the background of day to day life. In this paper we present the case for the use of RFID technology as a key technology of ubiquitous computing due to its ability to embed itself in everday objects and spaces. Frameworks to support the operation of RFID-based smart objects and spaces are discussed and key design concepts identified. Conceptual frameworks, based on academic research, and deployed frameworks based on real world implementations are reviewed and the potential for RFID as a truly ubiquitous technology is considered and presented.
%0 Book Section
%1 springerlink:10.1007/978-3-540-69293-5_39
%A O’Driscoll, Ciaran
%A MacCormac, Daniel
%A Deegan, Mark
%A Mtenzi, Fred
%A O’Shea, Brendan
%B Ubiquitous Intelligence and Computing
%D 2008
%E Sandnes, Frode
%E Zhang, Yan
%E Rong, Chunming
%E Yang, Laurence
%E Ma, Jianhua
%I Springer Berlin / Heidelberg
%K rfid ubiquitouscomputing mybsc
%P 490-504
%T RFID: An Ideal Technology for Ubiquitous Computing?
%U http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-540-69293-5_39
%V 5061
%X This paper presents a review of RFID based approaches used for the development of smart spaces and smart objects. We explore approaches that enable RFID technology to make the transition from the recognized applications such as retail to ubiquitous computing, in which computers and technology fade into the background of day to day life. In this paper we present the case for the use of RFID technology as a key technology of ubiquitous computing due to its ability to embed itself in everday objects and spaces. Frameworks to support the operation of RFID-based smart objects and spaces are discussed and key design concepts identified. Conceptual frameworks, based on academic research, and deployed frameworks based on real world implementations are reviewed and the potential for RFID as a truly ubiquitous technology is considered and presented.
@incollection{springerlink:10.1007/978-3-540-69293-5_39,
abstract = {This paper presents a review of RFID based approaches used for the development of smart spaces and smart objects. We explore approaches that enable RFID technology to make the transition from the recognized applications such as retail to ubiquitous computing, in which computers and technology fade into the background of day to day life. In this paper we present the case for the use of RFID technology as a key technology of ubiquitous computing due to its ability to embed itself in everday objects and spaces. Frameworks to support the operation of RFID-based smart objects and spaces are discussed and key design concepts identified. Conceptual frameworks, based on academic research, and deployed frameworks based on real world implementations are reviewed and the potential for RFID as a truly ubiquitous technology is considered and presented.},
added-at = {2010-10-27T13:56:53.000+0200},
affiliation = {Dublin Institute of Technology, Kevin Street, Dublin 8, Ireland},
author = {O’Driscoll, Ciaran and MacCormac, Daniel and Deegan, Mark and Mtenzi, Fred and O’Shea, Brendan},
biburl = {https://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/2331100c17f1a5b994925e1b99ec5e5f2/kw},
booktitle = {Ubiquitous Intelligence and Computing},
editor = {Sandnes, Frode and Zhang, Yan and Rong, Chunming and Yang, Laurence and Ma, Jianhua},
interhash = {082b2b2a93f158c6bacb53dcd1c2bd7d},
intrahash = {331100c17f1a5b994925e1b99ec5e5f2},
keywords = {rfid ubiquitouscomputing mybsc},
note = {10.1007/978-3-540-69293-5_39},
pages = {490-504},
publisher = {Springer Berlin / Heidelberg},
series = {Lecture Notes in Computer Science},
timestamp = {2012-08-24T14:02:31.000+0200},
title = {RFID: An Ideal Technology for Ubiquitous Computing?},
url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-540-69293-5_39},
volume = 5061,
year = 2008
}