Quantcast

Post-It Notes Go Mobile

Siemens researchers have developed a new technology they're calling digital graffiti.

John Blau, IDG News Service

  • 0 Yes
  • 0 No

Researchers at Siemens are calling new technology "digital graffiti," though it's not really graffiti. It's more like a mobile phone version of the omnipresent Post-it notes.

The application allows mobile phone owners to send a message, similar to an SMS (Short Message Service), to a geographical point where it appears on the screens of other users passing through the defined location. Unlike an SMS, the message is not sent to a person but rather to a location, and can be received by a number of mobile phone users entering the defined radius.

The Siemens digital graffiti application is more than a mobile phone location-based service, which typically offers local information provided by network operators and their content providers, according to a company spokesperson; the application also allows users to post notes to a zone themselves.

How It Works

Here's how it works: Users type in messages on a mobile device. The message is sent via a wireless link to a server, which assigns it to a geographical point and holds ready for call-up. The server then transmits the message to people entering the designated zone.

Pictures can be sent in addition to text messages, and all of the information can expire after a set date.

"Imagine a foreman walking through a plant and making notes of things to check for the maintenance crew on the production floor, or a friend who really knows his way around an area leaving tips of places to go for less familiar buddies," the spokesperson says.

That's easy to image but so is the potential for spam. A problem? "No, there will be ways to accept and reject messages," the spokesperson says.

The technology, developed in cooperation with researchers at the University of Linz in Austria and the Ars Electronica Center in Linz, is about two years from commercial roll-out, according to Siemens.

  • Recommend this story?
  • 0 Yes
    0 No

With HP wireless printers, you could have printed this from any room in the house. Live wirelessly. Print wirelessly.

Related Phones Articles

  • Web Demo: Discover the Benefits of VoIP Is your company looking for a world class VoIP communications solution that will meet all of your business requirements? If so, join us for our Live Online Demo where you will receive a "guided tour" to the AltiGen Solution.
  • PC World Webcast: Going Green Wondering how to make your business greener? These tips will help your business save money, and save the environment.
  • A Windows Vista FAQ Corporate customers are deploying Windows Vista now, and Dell Services wants to help you understand the features of the new OS and how to plan your Windows Vista deployment.

PC World's Marketplace

PC World's Free Whitepapers

Name City
Address 1 State Zip
Address 2 E-mail (optional)