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Journal ArticleDOI

Emerging mobile and wireless networks

TLDR
Wireless and mobile networks have provided the flexibility required for an increasingly mobile workforce and the technological maturity and the tremendous competition among service providers is indicated.
Abstract
W ith the increasing use of small portable computers, wireless networks, and satellites, a trend to support computing on the move has emerged—this trend is known as mobile computing or nomadic computing [3]. Also referred to as anytime/anywhere computing, mobile computing has several interesting and important applications for business (such as instant claim processing and e-commerce), telecommunications and personal communications, national defense (tracking troop movements), emergency and disaster management, real-time control systems, remote operation of appliances, and in accessing the Internet. Since a user may not maintain a fixed position in such environments, the mobile and wireless networking support allowing mobile users to communicate with other users (fixed or mobile) becomes crucial. A possible scenario may involve several different networks that can support or can be modified to support mobile users. When dealing with different wireless networks, a universal mobile device should be able to select the network (LAN, the Internet, PCS, or satellite) that best meets user requirements. Wireless and mobile networks have provided the flexibility required for an increasingly mobile workforce. As shown in Figure 1(a), the worldwide number of cellular, GSM, and PCS subscribers increased from 140 million in 1996 to over 300 million in 1999 and is expected to grow to 650 million by 2001 (see www.gsmdata.com). In the U.S., capital investment increased from $6.3 billion in 1990 to $66.8 billion in 1999 and service revenues were up from $4.5 billion to $38.7 billion in 1999 (see www.wow-com.com) as shown in Figure 1(b). During the same period, the average local monthly bill diminished from $80 to $39 as shown in Figure 1(c), indicating the technological maturity and the tremendous competition among service providers. Many general remarks can be made about wireless systems. First, the channel capacity typically available in wireless systems is much lower than what is Upkar Varshney and Ron Vetter

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Journal ArticleDOI

Pervasive healthcare and wireless health monitoring

TL;DR: One major application in pervasive healthcare, termed comprehensive health monitoring is presented in significant details using wireless networking solutions of wireless LANs, ad hoc wireless networks, and, cellular/GSM/3G infrastructure-oriented networks.
Journal ArticleDOI

Predicting consumer intention to use mobile service

TL;DR: The current research respecifies and validates an integrated model for predicting consumer intention to use m‐service by adding one trust‐related construct (‘perceived credibility’) and two resource‐related constructs to the TAM's nomological structure and re‐examining the relationships between the proposed constructs.
Journal ArticleDOI

Mobile commerce: framework, applications and networking support

TL;DR: This work proposes a four-level integrated framework for mobile commerce and attempts to identify several important classes of applications such as mobile financial applications, mobile inventory management, proactive service management, product location and search, and wireless re-engineering.
Journal Article

Value creation in mobile commerce: findings from a consumer survey

TL;DR: In this article, the authors highlight the importance of setting out from a consumer perspective when developing m-commerce strategies, proposing an analytical framework that can be used to assess whether, and in what ways, specific mobile services are likely to offer value for wireless Internet users.
Journal ArticleDOI

A Mobile Decision Support System for Dynamic Group Decision-Making Problems

TL;DR: This paper implements a prototype of a decision support system model in which experts use mobile phones to provide their preferences anywhere and anytime and incorporates a tool for managing the changes on the set of feasible alternatives that could happen throughout the decision process.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The challenges of mobile computing

TL;DR: The authors focus on the goal of large-scale, hand-held mobile computing as a way to reveal a wide assortment of issues and look at some promising approaches under investigation and also consider their limitations.
Journal ArticleDOI

Mobile IP

TL;DR: The basic protocol is described, with details given on the three major component protocols: agent advertisement, registration, and tunneling, and the current problems facing mobile IP are discussed.
Journal ArticleDOI

ATM-based transport architecture for multiservices wireless personal communication networks

TL;DR: This paper presents an ATM-based transport architecture for next-generation multiservices personal communication networks (PCN) that uses a hierarchical ATM switching network for interconnection of PCN microcells based on ATM-compatible cell, relay principles.
Journal ArticleDOI

Wireless LANs and mobile networking: standards and future directions

TL;DR: The article considers the network layer by discussing extensions that are being made to the widely used Internet protocol (IP) to deal with mobility (wired or wireless) and speculating on future directions for wireless LAN systems.
Journal ArticleDOI

ATM concepts, architectures, and protocols

TL;DR: Asynchronous transfer mode (ATM) is often described as the future computer networking paradigm that will bring high-speed communications to the desktop.
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