A study of full-motion video delivery system following user’s movement by utilizing user-context

This paper presents a basic configuration of the system that provides dynamically delivery senders of full-motion video while following target users around like a shadow in ubiquitous computing environments. The proposed system is composed of multiple computer displays attaching RFID tag reader, which has been automatically connected on the network via IP, and RFID tag on the user and some network servers. We adopted a passive tag RFID System. The delivery of full-motion video utilized an adaptive broadcasting. The system can continuously deliver a streaming data like full-motion video to the display, which the user moves one after another, through the database server and the streaming server on the network. Consequently, it is possible to support the user without having his/her conscious act of his/her own request to obtain user's necessary information in real time. This paper also describes a prototype implementation of the framework and a practical application

[1]  S. Havlin,et al.  Optimization of robustness of complex networks , 2004, cond-mat/0404331.

[2]  S. Havlin,et al.  Optimization of network robustness to waves of targeted and random attacks. , 2004, Physical review. E, Statistical, nonlinear, and soft matter physics.

[3]  Ichiro Satoh Linking physical worlds to logical worlds with mobile agents , 2004, IEEE International Conference on Mobile Data Management, 2004. Proceedings. 2004.

[4]  Andy Hopper,et al.  The Anatomy of a Context-Aware Application , 1999, Wirel. Networks.

[5]  Ichiro Satoh,et al.  Physical Mobility and Logical Mobility in Ubiquitous Computing Environments , 2002, Mobile Agents.

[6]  Bill Serra,et al.  People, Places, Things: Web Presence for the Real World , 2000, Proceedings Third IEEE Workshop on Mobile Computing Systems and Applications.

[7]  Eiji Kamioka,et al.  An overview of researches on ubiquitous computing networks , 2003 .

[8]  Computer Staff,et al.  People & places , 1976 .

[9]  James H. Aylor,et al.  Computer for the 21st Century , 1999, Computer.

[10]  Bill Serra,et al.  People, Places, Things: Web Presence for the Real World , 2002, Mob. Networks Appl..