h a l f b a k e r yBreakfast of runners-up.
add, search, annotate, link, view, overview, recent, by name, random
news, help, about, links, report a problem
browse anonymously,
or get an account
and write.
register,
|
|
|
reachme
Dynamic phone calls reach you where and how you want to be reached. | |
Change telephony into a location- and user- centric paradigm.
Rather than have multiple phone numbers, you would have just one number, or username really: say, "Fred". Calls forward to whatever device is near you at the time, and based on your preferences.
Better than a mobile phone, you are free
to use what's in your environment. You go home, and calls route to your full-size, hi fidelity handset. In the car, calls go to your in-car speakerphone. While jogging, calls reach you on your ipod (iphone).
The change of routing could be manual: ie you press a button on the device, or automatic: a chip your carry identifies you and broadcasts your presence.
Imagine how liberating and powerful this could be. Mobile phones really suck: the batteries die, they break, get lost / stolen. SIM cards make them somewhat dynamic, but really why should you be tied to one piece of hardware at a time? You can check email from multiple devices / locations, right? Why not phone calls? Imagine going into a hotel, the phone rings and it's your husband checking to make sure you arrived okay. You didn't even have to tell him which hotel or room you were staying in. And no fumbling for your cell phone (and did the battery die on the long flight..?)
To boot, you could provide context-aware info to the caller. For instance, if calls are going to your car, the caller might be alerted that you are driving and to "keep it short..". Taking it one step further, for trusted callers you could enable an in-car webcam, so they can peer into your environment & know not to distract you when traffic is hectic.
You could also screen calls/callers based on context. For instance, only family members while jogging.
This wouldn't really require a major change in infrastructure, mostly just new devices. The cell networks would have to allow two-way data connections.
"Ten lessons learned about Ubiquitous Computing"
http://www.vs.inf.e...des/roy-lessons.pdf Nice little presentation slides on the history of the subject of Ubiquitous Computing/Telecommunications [Jinbish, Nov 20 2008]
Google Did It!
http://www.grandcentral.com/ (It's the new "Simpsons Did It!") Grand Central takes all of your numbers and routes them through one number. You can set up rules so that certain callers ring certain phones or even all of your phones at once. From what I hear it is very useful. [rfl717, Nov 22 2008]
Please log in.
If you're not logged in,
you can see what this page
looks like, but you will
not be able to add anything.
Annotation:
|
|
This is old had, conceptually, and is exactly the way things will work in the future. |
|
|
... phone companies do this already, though the addition of number-based commentaries: "I'm on my mobile" or "I'm at Fred's" is nove. |
|
|
A subset of this is usually called "find me / follow me". Right? |
|
|
Baked. In Australia, he carrier Telstra had a product called Telepath One Number. But it didn't sell well coz most customers are happy to have just 1 number, the mobile number. Telstra has stopped selling this service |
|
|
Nice idea [feverall], but it's not particularly new. The research community has examined this topic for quite a long time (and there are loads of ways of 'solving' the challenges). |
|
|
The general idea is that you have a federated identity and then devices attached to that: mobile@feverall.com, home_phone@feverall.com, answerphone@feverall.com, workphone@feverall.com
... etc |
|
|
The context awareness is a specifically hot topic (or was, anyway) whereby the system automaticlaly tries to sense which device/which callers to connect and what technology to use. |
|
| |