Foreword By Ian Browde. Foreword By Dex Smith. INTRODUCTION. 1. From the Backroom to Everyday Life. A Day in Your Life (ca. 2010). History of Computing. Trends in Computing. Conclusion. 2. Contrasting the Present and the Future. Mobile Sales Force. Real Estate Agent. Family Life. Work-Life Balance. Construction Site. Holiday Break-In. Extended Manufacturing. Fleet Management. Conclusion. II. DESIGN ELEMENTS FOR RADICAL SIMPLICITY. 3. Human-Computer Interaction. Introduction. Intelligent Input Interfaces. Intelligent Output Interfaces. Context Awareness. Conclusion. 4. Designing To Make You Smile. Introduction. Systems Development Methods. Psychological Design Aspects. The Interface Is the Application. Globalization. Conclusion. III. PRINCIPAL TECHNOLOGICAL COMPONENTS. 5. Me-Centric Architectures. Introduction. Overview of Architecture-Driven Approach. Key Ideas. Conclusion. 6. Web Services. Introduction. Web Services Networks. Extensible Markup Language. Web Services Technologies. Solution Stack. Examples. Conclusion. 7. Agents: Igniting Machine-to-Machine Work. Software Agents. Mobile Agents. Challenges with Agents. Automated Web Services. Examples. Conclusion. IV. NEW BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES. 8. Intelligent Appliances. Introduction. Infrastructure Needs Me. Appliance Design. Examples. Conclusion. 9. Reshaping Everyday Life. The Multifaceted Me. Revisiting Computing and IT. Conclusion. Appendix. Glossary. Me-Centric Web Sites. Bibliography. Subject Index.
This book is about change. Me-Centric computing will revolutionize how we approach computing and appliances of all types. In fact, we won't have to approach them at all. In some cases they will "know" what it is we want them to do. In this book, technology and business strategists learn how to make me-centric computing work for them. Until recently, the growth of computer usage has been driven primarily around the ability of computers to crunch numbers, handle text, and edit documents and slide presentations. Computers in the backroom were invisible to us. Productivity gains were modest initially and probably reached diminishing returns some time ago. The world is about to be turned upside down, however. This new technology is called "me-centric" because it fits into the individual's life in a natural way, conforming to preferences and requirements, taking orders, and performing a variety of delegated tasks. In me-centric computing, every appliance becomes part of my environment, my team, my extension. I get increased power, save time, have more fun, do fewer menial tasks because the vast power of computers, communications, and software is working in concert to do my bidding.
DR. FREDERICK ("RICK") HAYES-ROTH is Hewlett-Packard's Chief Technology Officer for Software. He formerly served as Chairman and CEO of Teknowledge, a company focused on intelligent Internet transactions. A Fellow of the American Association of Artificial Intelligence, he has held faculty positions at Stanford, Carnegie-Mellon, and MIT. DANIEL AMOR, Chief Technologist, E-commerce for HP in Germany, is author of The E-Business (R)evolution, Second Edition, and Internet Future Strategies.
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