Association control in mobile wireless networks
Minkyong Kim, Zhen Liu, et al.
INFOCOM 2008
Contextual collaboration seamlessly integrates existing groupware technologies into a uniform user experience that combines synchronous and asynchronous interactions. This user experience is usually supported by a collaboration infrastructure that needs to efficiently cope with the fast switching and integration of different modes of interaction. In this paper, we study a model for contextual collaboration that supports multiple modalities of collaboration. Our model is based on generic shared objects that provide building blocks for supporting contextual collaboration applications. We describe a native implementation of this model and evaluate its behavior under different media traffic conditions. We compare the native implementation with an alternative implementation that integrates existing notification and meeting servers to deliver the same model behavior. We discuss trade-offs and limitations of those two implementations. © J.UCS.
Minkyong Kim, Zhen Liu, et al.
INFOCOM 2008
Rolf Clauberg
IBM J. Res. Dev
Raymond F. Boyce, Donald D. Chamberlin, et al.
CACM
Apostol Natsev, Alexander Haubold, et al.
MMSP 2007