Welcome!
To use the personalized features of this site, please log in or register.
If you have forgotten your username or password, we can help.
|
 |
Ubiquitous Web Applications
| |
|
Ubiquitous Web Applications
Franca Garzotto6 
| (6) |
Department of Electronics and Information, HOC-Hypermedia Open Center, Politecnico di Milano, Italy |
Abstract
Web sites are progressively evolving from browsable, readonly information repositories that exploit the web to interact with
their users, to web-based applications, combining navigation and search capabilities with operations and transactions typical
of information systems. In parallel, the possibility of accessing web-based contents and services through a number of different
devices, ranging from full-fledged desktop computers, to Personal Digital Assistants (PDA’s), to mobile phones, to set-top
boxes connected to TV’s, makes web applications ubiquitous, i.e., accessible anywhere at any time.
Ubiquitous Web Applications (UWA’s for short) reveal a number of aspects which make them different with respect to a conventional
data-intensive applications, and must be taken into account throughout the whole application lifecycle, from requirements
to implementation. UWA’s are executed in a Web-based environment, where the paradigm for presenting and accessing information
is hypermedia-like. Thus UWA’s have a mixed nature - hypermedia and transactional, where hypertext structures and operation
capabilities are strongly intertwined. In addition, the ubiquitous nature of a UWA implies that the application has to take
into account the different constraints of different devices, comprising display size, local storage size, method of input
and computing speed as well as network capacity. At the same time, ubiquity introduces new requirements on how the application
tunes itself to the end user: each user may wish to get information, navigation patterns, lay-out, and services, that are
tailored not only to his/her specific profile but also to the current situation of use, in its temporal and environmental
aspects. Thus Ubiquitous Web Applications must be at the same time device-aware, user-aware, and context-of-use-aware, and
require sophisticate forms of customization.
After an analysis of the novel requirements of UWA’s, this talk will focus on their impact on the design process, and will
discuss problems and challenges related to modeling information and navigation structures, operations and transactions, and
customization mechanisms for this class of applications.
Fulltext Preview (Small, Large)
|
|
|
|
|
|