Ubiquitous computing and context-aware technologies have fundamentally reshaped human–machine interactions by seamlessly integrating computational functionality into everyday environments. This ...
The original digital computers of the 1940s and 1950s were gigantic room-sized monsters. The ENIAC built in 1945, for example, weighed 30 tons and contained more than 18,000 vacuum tubes drawing 200 ...
The first time people don the new HoloLens 2 on their heads, the device automatically gets to know them: It measures everything from the precise shape of their hands to the exact distance between ...
In September 1991, Scientific American published an article by Mark Weiser, the then head of Xerox's PARC computer science laboratory, entitled 'The Computer for the 21st Century'. In that piece he ...
A world in which computers and networks disappear into the background of smart rooms and buildings is as viable a vision today as it was when the concept of ubiquitous computing was first articulated ...
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