DocumentCode
776339
Title
Beam me up, doctor McCoy [pervasive computing]
Author
Stanford, V.
Author_Institution
NIST Smart Space Laboratory
Volume
2
Issue
3
fYear
2003
Firstpage
13
Lastpage
18
Abstract
Interplanetary explorers in science fiction have long worn communicators to keep in voice contact with team members and deliver crucial information just when needed. Wearers simply ask the badge to contact appropriate individuals by name, function, or location-voila, they are connected. Moreover, the badges respond only to their owners, not to nearby casual conversations. They are always light, small, and casually portable. Best yet they are no longer fiction. To see how this concept translates to a real-life working organization with pressing scheduled and a busy staff, I spoke with representatives from Vocera Communications, which has developed a working communicator badge system for mobile users, and from St. Vincent´s Hospital in Birmingham, Alabama, which has deployed the Vocera system. As with other pervasive systems we´ve covered, this one delivers information directly to mobile workers, at the point of service, thus saving numerous trips to distant telephones, terminals, and PCs to get needed data and messages.
Keywords
mobile computing; speech recognition; speech-based user interfaces; Vocera Communications; communicator badge system; mobile computing; personal computers; pervasive computing; speech recognition; Engines; Job shop scheduling; Mobile communication; Pressing; Prototypes; Speech recognition; Speech synthesis; Standards development; Switches; Wireless networks;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Pervasive Computing, IEEE
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
1536-1268
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/MPRV.2003.1228522
Filename
1228522
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