Not only that, but the usual promises of
ubiquitous computing also apply: this smart dust could be all over the place, doing little calculations, sensing conditions, connecting with other motes and the internet to allow... well, use your imagination.
Not exact matches
Bill Buxton, a principal researcher at Microsoft Research,
also worked in the
ubiquitous computing group at Xerox PARC in the 1980s.
Beware,
also, the «Internet of Things» — «
ubiquitous»
computing where everything you have is trackable through RFID.
This is «the era of
ubiquitous computing,» but
also a renaissance in digital creativity.
Devices are getting smaller, while
also more
ubiquitous; speech technology is gradually powering more of our
computing interaction; and companies, including Apple, are emphasizing the importance of getting people hooked into their services, not just buying their hardware.