| Dr Jeff Pierce is an Assistant
Professor in the College of Computing at the Georgia Institute of Technology,
where he conducts research on next-generation user interfaces. Pierce
leads the Personal Information Environments research group and co-directs
the Adaptive Personalized Information Environments lab with Dr Charles
Isbell. "We are connected 24/7, but don't yet have reasonable access
to data with mobile phones", says Pierce, who is working to change
that fact. In receiver, he talks about how mobile phones can
become an extension of the PC. |
Today's information workers have
gone beyond the traditional model of a user working in an office with a
personal computer. Instead of being tied to a fixed location, workers empowered
by mobile devices and pervasive wireless and cellular networks can increasingly
access and share digital information when and where they see fit. Workers
are also spreading their computing activities beyond a single personal computer:
they now interact across a variety of computing devices, including desktop
computers, laptops, tablets, personal digital assistants (PDAs), and cellular
phones.
Those two trends present an opportunity, but also several challenges. The
opportunity is to allow workers to take advantage of their heterogeneous
collection of computing devices to access, interact with, and share their
information at any time using any of their devices. The challenges are that
currently the contents of those devices may differ drastically because workers
perform different tasks with different devices at different times; all devices
are not physically or network accessible at all times; and current computing
devices, because each largely assumes that it is a user's only device, provide
little to no support for coordinating activities across them.
The following scenario illustrates these challenges:
Alice is visiting a satellite corporate office and arranges to meet
Bob, a colleague, for lunch. They discuss how their respective jobs are
going and exchange details of recent projects. During their conversation,
Bob expresses an interest in reading a market research report that Alice
just recently finished writing. Unfortunately, it is on her desktop computer,
which is back in her home office. Rather than immediately sharing the report
with Bob, Alice must remember to email it to him when she returns from her
trip.
The solution we propose to overcome the challenges and realize the opportunity
is to take a worker's collection of heterogeneous personal computing devices
and organize them into a personal information environment. Devices in such
an environment should be aware of each other, able to contact each other
regardless of intervening firewalls and changing network addresses, and
able to actively help users manage information and activities across them.
We tackled the problem of helping users serendipitously share files with
others as an initial motivating example and step toward our proposed solution.
Mobile information workers frequently need to share files with or receive
them from others. While workers currently have access to a variety of file-sharing
mechanisms (eg email, posting them on a web page, putting them on a USB
flash drive, point-to-point "beaming"), existing mechanisms assume
either that users have direct access (either physical or network) to the
device containing the files or that the user has anticipated the need to
share them. |