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Mobile World [electronic resource] :Past, Present and Future / by Colston Sanger ; edited by Lynne Hamill, Amparo Lasen, Dan Diaper.

by Sanger, Colston [author.]; Hamill, Lynne [editor.]; Lasen, Amparo [editor.]; Diaper, Dan [editor.]; SpringerLink (Online service).
Material type: materialTypeLabelBookSeries: Computer Supported Cooperative Work: Publisher: London : Springer London, 2005.Description: VIII, 218 p. online resource.ISBN: 9781846282041.Subject(s): Computer science | Computer Communication Networks | Information systems | Telecommunication | Computer Science | User Interfaces and Human Computer Interaction | Information Systems Applications (incl.Internet) | Communications Engineering, Networks | Computer Communication NetworksDDC classification: 005.437 | 4.019 Online resources: Click here to access online
Contents:
Introduction: Digital Revolution - Mobile Revolution? -- Mobile Telephony: Realising the Dream of Ideal Communication? -- History Repeating? A Comparison of the Launch and Uses of Fixed and Mobile Phones -- Kids will be Kids: The Role of Mobiles in Teenage Life -- An SMS History -- Emotional Attachment to Mobile Phones: An Extraordinary Relationship -- Textmates and Text Circles: Insights into the Social Ecology of SMS Text Messaging -- Appropriating Tools and Shaping Activities: The Use of PDAs in the Workplace -- Different Directions in the Mobile Internet: Analysing Mobile Internet Services in Japan and Europe -- Context Perspectives for Scenarios and Research Development in Mobile Systems -- Instant Messaging and Presence Services: Mobile Future, CSCW and Ethnography.
In: Springer eBooksSummary: Why have mobile phones so quickly become part of our everyday lives? This book brings together the perspectives of key researchers in the area to explore lessons on social shaping, examining what can be learnt from the adoption of mobile devices that can be applied to other, newer, digital technologies. Forecasting the impact of new technology is always difficult. Occasionally demand is underestimated, but more often it is overestimated, and at great cost. Digital technology is unlike anything that has gone before, making it particularly difficult to understand its implications for businesses, public services and society in general. By looking at what has happened in the past and what is happening now, and offering methods of using this knowledge to look forward, this book will contribute to reducing expensive forecasting errors in the future. Key reading for all those involved with the future of mobile communications, this book is a valuable resource, particularly for advanced undergraduate and postgraduate students on Mobile Technology courses, practitioners, and researchers working in mobile communications, CSCW and HCI. This volume is a sequel to Brown et al: Wireless World: Social and Interactional Aspects of the Mobile Age, also in the CSCW series. "This book presents a rich insight into how and why the mobile has become so important in today’s society. It explores the strong emotional attachment that people have to these devices, and argues that it is people and not the technology that developers must put at the heart of future mobile offerings. A valuable book for industry and academics alike." Dr Phil Gosset, Vodafone Group R&D
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Introduction: Digital Revolution - Mobile Revolution? -- Mobile Telephony: Realising the Dream of Ideal Communication? -- History Repeating? A Comparison of the Launch and Uses of Fixed and Mobile Phones -- Kids will be Kids: The Role of Mobiles in Teenage Life -- An SMS History -- Emotional Attachment to Mobile Phones: An Extraordinary Relationship -- Textmates and Text Circles: Insights into the Social Ecology of SMS Text Messaging -- Appropriating Tools and Shaping Activities: The Use of PDAs in the Workplace -- Different Directions in the Mobile Internet: Analysing Mobile Internet Services in Japan and Europe -- Context Perspectives for Scenarios and Research Development in Mobile Systems -- Instant Messaging and Presence Services: Mobile Future, CSCW and Ethnography.

Why have mobile phones so quickly become part of our everyday lives? This book brings together the perspectives of key researchers in the area to explore lessons on social shaping, examining what can be learnt from the adoption of mobile devices that can be applied to other, newer, digital technologies. Forecasting the impact of new technology is always difficult. Occasionally demand is underestimated, but more often it is overestimated, and at great cost. Digital technology is unlike anything that has gone before, making it particularly difficult to understand its implications for businesses, public services and society in general. By looking at what has happened in the past and what is happening now, and offering methods of using this knowledge to look forward, this book will contribute to reducing expensive forecasting errors in the future. Key reading for all those involved with the future of mobile communications, this book is a valuable resource, particularly for advanced undergraduate and postgraduate students on Mobile Technology courses, practitioners, and researchers working in mobile communications, CSCW and HCI. This volume is a sequel to Brown et al: Wireless World: Social and Interactional Aspects of the Mobile Age, also in the CSCW series. "This book presents a rich insight into how and why the mobile has become so important in today’s society. It explores the strong emotional attachment that people have to these devices, and argues that it is people and not the technology that developers must put at the heart of future mobile offerings. A valuable book for industry and academics alike." Dr Phil Gosset, Vodafone Group R&D

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