Itgs – Areas of Impact Home and Leisure Homes and Home Networks: lighting a 'cure' for sick building syndrome



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That's important because some PDA users pay for the amount of time that they stay online but others pay for a cost per KB - in other words, the bigger the file size of the page the more expensive it will be for them.

More modern PDAs have special software that can allow them to receive web pages quite quickly.

That's because they use special compression software so we are going to start seeing more and more pages on PDAs like the one you are looking at now.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/webwise/askbruce/articles/mobiles/netonpda_1.shtml

ITGS – Areas of Impact

Home and Leisure

Hardware, Software and Networks: Portable Digital Devices

Chemists escape labs via mobiles

A blend of mobile technology and award-winning software is letting scientists finally escape the lab.

The software, called "middleware", lets different computer systems talk to each other securely and instantaneously.

As part of a national e-Science project in the UK, it is being used to let Southampton University chemists monitor experiment conditions from mobiles.

Sensors in the lab pick up any changes in the environment so the system can alert chemists, wherever they are.

"It replaces the traditional notebook with some electronic form, but it is not just about carrying around a computer - it is much smarter than that," Dr Jeremy Frey, from Southampton University, told the BBC New website.

"We wanted to be able to monitor and keep tabs on experiments outside the labs," he explained.

This is crucial because if there is an anomaly in the experiment data, it could be down to a change in temperature, light, or some other external factor.

The technology makes it easier for these to be spotted, flagged up, recorded, and analysed as soon as possible by experts collaborating all over the world.



No messy messaging

Dr Andy Stanford-Clark, IBM's pervasive messaging technologies manager, explained: "It is 'off-the-shelf' so people don't have to worry about what happens.

"It is like a parcel service - you just wrap it up and send it. You don't have to worry about the bits and bytes, ones and zeroes," he said.

Although monitoring experiments away from the lab has always been possible, explained Dr Frey, it is a challenge getting systems to talk to mobiles, for instance.

"The older ways of doing it were very bespoke and programs often had to be rewritten, if a new line of data was added, for instance.

"Now we can put new sensors in, the system can talk to the broker [middleware], publish it, and anyone can subscribe to it, taking the information they want."

If a particular element in or around the experiment changes above a certain level, it will let the scientists know immediately.

"It is better to be away from an experiment, but you always want to monitor them - you never know when things may go wrong," said Dr Frey.

The team's laser experiment, behind locked doors, is looking at the behaviour of molecules at the surface of oil and water and the conditions have to be strictly controlled.




It is better to be away from an experiment, but you always want to monitor them - you never know when things may go wrong


Dr Jeremy Frey, Soton
Sensors positioned around the lab monitor the environment and feed data into a computer.

The system can also detect when a person has entered the secure lab, which can be dangerous or disruptive to the individual and the science itself.

Data can be accessed from any GPRS or wi-fi smartphone or personal digital assistant that uses internet protocol, without having to build any other application that will let the systems translate and talk to each other.

That means it works whatever kind of operating system that the device runs on.

On the device is a prototype program for scientists to be able to read the data.

It has been specially developed for the project to be a light application, so that it requires little bandwidth.

"Pervasive computing in the last five or six years, with smartphones and PDAs and small sensors which people want to gather data from, and send to, really has come onto our radars," said Dr Stanford-Clark.

With the speed of experimental processes accelerating, it is crucial, added Dr Frey, for people to have access to data immediately and to trace back all that was done in an experiment in more detail.



PDAs everywhere

Members of Dr Frey's non-linear laser spectroscopy research group, working as part of the Combechem project, have been successfully trying out the system at conferences - and in the university bar.

The next step is to evolve the system so that at a push of a button on a mobile, scientists will be able to remotely change the conditions in the lab, like turning down the temperature.

It could also realise the promise of controlling home environments from phones easily and seamlessly.






Chemists enjoy a drink at the bar while keeping and eye on the lab
But there are many other potential applications for the monitoring jobs done by the power industries, healthcare professions and other labs.

IBM won the Royal Academy of Engineering's MacRobert prize which rewards technological and engineering innovation for the program in June last year.

Used by top global banks, the WebSphere MQ family is a decade old.

It has transformed e-commerce because of its ability to allow data transfers across computer systems and different platforms without extra coding.

Combechem is a UK e-Science project funded by the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC).

The project is working on grid-enabled combinatorial chemistry. A big part of the project is to develop an e-Lab, using pervasive computing technology.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/4233757.stm

ITGS – Areas of Impact

Home and Leisure

Hardware, Software and Networks: Remotely Controlled Devices

EU smart-home concept shown off

"Smart-home" technology that allows people to control household appliances via their mobile phone or other gadgets is being shown off in Germany.
The EU-funded i2home project is aimed at giving greater independence and freedom to older and disabled people.
It uses so-called "middleware" to allow heating, air conditioning, lighting, and other gadgets to be controlled by a user's chosen interface.
It is the result of research between EU industry, universities and user groups.

"The users of the technology have been the driving force in the project - all technical solutions are based on a thorough investigation of the users' needs and desires," said project coordinator, Jan Alexandersson.


Kitchen concept

The researchers worked with various groups in order to match the technology to their needs, including Alzheimer's patients, blind and partially-sighted people and young people with cognitive impairments.


The research has now officially come to an end. But the project team, and some of the users, are still evaluating the work and demonstrating how the technology can be used in the German town of Saarbrücken.
There, the technology has been installed in a mocked-up kitchen.



The smart home technology uses a variety of interfaces
"Finally, something that works," said Ginger Classen, a blind, German accessibility expert.

"If this technology is adopted by many manufacturers, I could finally go appliance shopping like sighted people in a normal store, having the choice to buy cool and stylish products."


This platform requires all appliances in the home to be networked together.
The middleware sits between the home appliances and a controlling device, such as a mobile phone, and allows them to communicate. i2home has also created a variety of interfaces for control devices.
So far the group has tested touch screens, mobile phones running the Windows Mobile and Android platforms, speech input and output devices and an ordinary domestic TV set with a simplified remote control to run the UCH.
The researches say that i2home demonstrates that technology - that has traditionally been regarded as too complex for many mainstream users - can be made usable and enjoyable for older and disabled people.
In addition, because the middleware has been built to open standards, it means that anyone can use the underlying code to build their own user interface for a device to control networked appliances.
By the start of 2010, there were more already than 100 organisations and companies in Europe using or working with i2home technology, according to Mr Alexandersson.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/technology/8495479.stm

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