Selecting Computing Devices to Support Mobile Collaboration

Posted by LeighJaschke on Jul 07, 2009
Author: 
Guerrero, Luis; Ochoa, Sergio; Pino, José; Collazos, César
Publication Type: 
Report/White paper
Publication Date: 
May 2006
Publisher/Journal: 
Group Decision and Negotiation, Springer.
Abstract: 

Collaboration supported by mobile devices has brought advantages for users and also challenges for software developers and mobile computing devices manufacturers. Every kind of device used to support mobile collaboration has strengths and weaknesses depending on the work context where it is used. The idea is to use a specific device when advantages are most relevant and disadvantages do not affect team work. This paper proposes an evaluation framework that helps developers to identify the type of device that can be used to support mobile collaboration in specific work contexts. In addition, three mobile collaborative applications are analyzed using the evaluation framework. The results of the analysis are then compared with the empirically observed suitability.

Citation: 
Group Decision and Negotiation, Volume 15, Number 3, May 2006 , pp. 243-271(29). Springer.
Selecting Computing Devices to Support Mobile Collaboration data sheet 3100 Views
Author: 
Guerrero, Luis; Ochoa, Sergio; Pino, José; Collazos, César
Publication Type: 
Report/White paper
Publication Date: 
May 2006
Publisher/Journal: 
Group Decision and Negotiation, Springer.
Abstract: 

Collaboration supported by mobile devices has brought advantages for users and also challenges for software developers and mobile computing devices manufacturers. Every kind of device used to support mobile collaboration has strengths and weaknesses depending on the work context where it is used. The idea is to use a specific device when advantages are most relevant and disadvantages do not affect team work. This paper proposes an evaluation framework that helps developers to identify the type of device that can be used to support mobile collaboration in specific work contexts. In addition, three mobile collaborative applications are analyzed using the evaluation framework. The results of the analysis are then compared with the empirically observed suitability.

Citation: 
Group Decision and Negotiation, Volume 15, Number 3, May 2006 , pp. 243-271(29). Springer.

Post new comment

The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.
  • Allowed HTML tags: <a> <em> <strong> <cite> <code> <ul> <ol> <li> <dl> <dt> <dd><p><br> <b><i><blockquote>
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.

More information about formatting options