A major challenge for ubiquitous system design is creating applications that are legal-compatible and accepted by their intended users. Today’s European data protection principles contradict the ideas of ubiquitous computing. Additionally, users have to deal with unconventional interaction concepts leading to a low amount of trust and acceptance in such systems. Current development approaches do not sufficiently cover these concerns, as they do not systematically incorporate expertise from the relevant disciplines. We present a novel development approach for ubiquitous systems that explicitly addresses these concerns. Our primary task was to manage the increased number of stakeholders and dependencies, respectively conflicts between requirements of the particular disciplines. The approach incorporates predefined artifacts and a defined workflow with responsibilities, as well as suggesting how to develop mutual understanding. We apply this multidisciplinary approach to develop the ubiquitous application Meet-U.
%0 Book Section
%1 comes2012designing
%A Comes, DianaElena
%A Evers, Christoph
%A Geihs, Kurt
%A Hoffmann, Axel
%A Kniewel, Romy
%A Leimeister, JanMarco
%A Niemczyk, Stefan
%A Roßnagel, Alexander
%A Schmidt, Ludger
%A Schulz, Thomas
%A Söllner, Matthias
%A Witsch, Andreas
%B Distributed Applications and Interoperable Systems
%D 2012
%E Göschka, KarlMichael
%E Haridi, Seif
%I Springer Berlin Heidelberg
%K Acceptance Computing Law Trust Ubiquitous Usability vs
%P 194-201
%R 10.1007/978-3-642-30823-9_17
%T Designing Socio-technical Applications for Ubiquitous Computing
%U http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-30823-9_17
%V 7272
%X A major challenge for ubiquitous system design is creating applications that are legal-compatible and accepted by their intended users. Today’s European data protection principles contradict the ideas of ubiquitous computing. Additionally, users have to deal with unconventional interaction concepts leading to a low amount of trust and acceptance in such systems. Current development approaches do not sufficiently cover these concerns, as they do not systematically incorporate expertise from the relevant disciplines. We present a novel development approach for ubiquitous systems that explicitly addresses these concerns. Our primary task was to manage the increased number of stakeholders and dependencies, respectively conflicts between requirements of the particular disciplines. The approach incorporates predefined artifacts and a defined workflow with responsibilities, as well as suggesting how to develop mutual understanding. We apply this multidisciplinary approach to develop the ubiquitous application Meet-U.
%@ 978-3-642-30822-2
@incollection{comes2012designing,
abstract = {A major challenge for ubiquitous system design is creating applications that are legal-compatible and accepted by their intended users. Today’s European data protection principles contradict the ideas of ubiquitous computing. Additionally, users have to deal with unconventional interaction concepts leading to a low amount of trust and acceptance in such systems. Current development approaches do not sufficiently cover these concerns, as they do not systematically incorporate expertise from the relevant disciplines. We present a novel development approach for ubiquitous systems that explicitly addresses these concerns. Our primary task was to manage the increased number of stakeholders and dependencies, respectively conflicts between requirements of the particular disciplines. The approach incorporates predefined artifacts and a defined workflow with responsibilities, as well as suggesting how to develop mutual understanding. We apply this multidisciplinary approach to develop the ubiquitous application Meet-U.},
added-at = {2014-02-19T09:59:59.000+0100},
author = {Comes, DianaElena and Evers, Christoph and Geihs, Kurt and Hoffmann, Axel and Kniewel, Romy and Leimeister, JanMarco and Niemczyk, Stefan and Roßnagel, Alexander and Schmidt, Ludger and Schulz, Thomas and Söllner, Matthias and Witsch, Andreas},
biburl = {https://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/2c7970f79f41d76675ba6fa5049732917/vskassel},
booktitle = {Distributed Applications and Interoperable Systems},
doi = {10.1007/978-3-642-30823-9_17},
editor = {Göschka, KarlMichael and Haridi, Seif},
interhash = {ee9f19a2f86c15c5f0420495d3dcffde},
intrahash = {c7970f79f41d76675ba6fa5049732917},
isbn = {978-3-642-30822-2},
keywords = {Acceptance Computing Law Trust Ubiquitous Usability vs},
pages = {194-201},
publisher = {Springer Berlin Heidelberg},
series = {Lecture Notes in Computer Science},
timestamp = {2014-02-19T09:59:59.000+0100},
title = {Designing Socio-technical Applications for Ubiquitous Computing},
url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-30823-9_17},
volume = 7272,
year = 2012
}