Pervasive Computing

sangeetha95 6,522 views 15 slides Feb 13, 2016
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About This Presentation

Pervasive and ubiquitous computing


Slide Content

PERVASIVE COMPUTING COMPUTING IS EVERYWHERE AND ANYWHERE

INTRODUCTION GOALS OF PERVASIVE COMPUTING LAYERS IN PERVASIVE COMPUTING PRINCIPLES OF PERVASIVE COMPUTING VISIONS AND CHALLENGE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN UBIQUITOUS AND PERVASIVE COMPUTING APPLICATIONS BENEFITS LIMITATIONS CONCLUSION SYNOPSIS

INTRODUCTION Pervasive computing (also called ubiquitous computing) is the growing trend towards embedding microprocessors in everyday objects so they can communicate information.  The words pervasive and ubiquitous mean "existing everywhere." Pervasive computing devices are completely connected and constantly available.  Pervasive computing relies on the convergence of  wireless technologies, advanced electronics and the Internet. The goal of researchers working in pervasive computing is to create  smart  products that communicate unobtrusively. The products are connected to the Internet and the data they generate is easily available.  

The idea that technology is moving beyond the personal computer to everyday devices with embedded technology and connectivity as computing devices become progressively smaller and more powerful. Also called  ubiquitous computing , pervasive computing is the result of computer technology advancing at exponential speeds -- a trend toward all man-made and some natural products having hardware and software.

GOAL OF PERVASIVE COMPUTING Pervasive computing goes beyond the realm of personal computers: it is the idea that almost any device, from clothing to tools to appliances to cars to homes to the human body to your coffee mug, can be imbedded with chips to connect the device to an infinite network of other devices. The goal of pervasive computing, which combines current network technologies with wireless computing,  voice recognition, Internet capability and artificial intelligence, is to create an environment where the connectivity of devices is embedded in such a way that the connectivity is unobtrusive and always available.

Pervasive computing may be seen to consist of many layers, each with their own roles, which together form a single system: Layer 1:  task management layer Monitors user task, context and index Map user's task to need for the services in the environment To manage complex dependencies Layer 2:  environment management layer To monitor a resource and its capabilities To map service need, user level states of specific capabilities Layer 3:  environment layer To monitor a relevant resource To manage reliability of the resources

PRINCIPLES OF PERVASIVE COMPUTING

visions and challenge   The essence of that vision was the creation of environments saturated with computing and communication capability, yet gracefully integrated with human users. When articulated, this was a vision too far ahead of its time — the hardware technology needed to achieve it simply did not exist.

Difference between Ubiquitous and Pervasive Computing Ubiquitous means everywhere. Pervasive means "diffused throughout every part of." In computing terms, those seem like somewhat similar concepts. Ubiquitous computing would be everywhere, and pervasive computing would be in all parts of your life. That might mean the difference between seeing kiosks on every street corner and finding that you could -- or need to -- use your Palm handheld to do absolutely every information-based task. And, in fact, that's where the difference between these two types of computing lies. Pervasive computing involves devices like handhelds -- small, easy-to-use devices -- through which we'll be able to get information on anything and everything. That's the sort of thing that Web-enabled cell phones promise. Ubiquitous computing, though, eschews our having to use computers at all. Instead, it's computing in the background, with technology embedded in the things we already use. That might be a car navigation system that, by accessing satellite pictures, alerts us to a traffic jam ahead, or an oven that shuts off when our food is cooked.    Pervasive   describes things that spread through a place to become established everywhere. Ubiquitous   describes things that are everywhere in a place because it is the nature of that place to have those ubiquitous things.  

APPLICATIONS

BENEFITS   INVISIBLE: “Smart” environments will be embedded with computing technologies that will be mostly out-of-sight. SOIALIZATION: “Smart” buildings will illicit a more social response from occupants as computers user interfaces embed themselves within architecture. DECISION-MAKING: “Smart” environments will help occupants to make better choices as they go about their everyday lives. EMERGENT BEHAVIOR: Buildings are now becoming more and more kinetic in form and function. Their movements and constructed designs come together dynamically to yield behaviours that make them more adaptive. INFORMATION PROCESSING: Architecture will go from crunching data to making sense of data; therefore, eliminating our need to constantly input adjustments.   ENHANCING EXPERIENCE: As computers ubiquitously embed themselves in our environments, sensors and actuators will create “smart” environments where architecture space will be goal oriented.   CONVERGENCE : Much of our environment will be supplemented with interconnected digital technologies.

LIMITATIONS Not entirely secure Frequent line connections that are broken Slow connections Very expensive operating costs

CONCLUSION