IYOUIT

IYOUIT is a mobile alpha service to share personal experiences with others while on the go. It was released in June 2008 by NTT Docomo Euro-Labs[1] and discontinued in August 2011.[2]

IYOUIT
Screenshot
Mobile client
Developer(s)Docomo Euro-Labs, Munich and Telematica Instituut, Enschede
Initial releaseJune 26, 2008
Written inPython (programming language)
Operating systemSymbian OS
TypeContext awareness
Websitewww.iyouit.eu

IYOUIT allows for an instant automated sharing of personal experiences within communities online. It offers contextual tagging for use in everyday life. By hooking a mobile phone up to the Web 2.0 services Flickr and Twitter, sharing can be instant, by posting single data items to such services, or through the aggregation of context information in online blogs.

IYOUIT provides users with access to the whereabouts of their friends, informs them about weather conditions and uploads photos taken and sounds recorded. If the user comes across a book (or other products), they can take a picture of the ISBN code or the product ID with the phone's camera, and IYOUIT will fill in the blanks for instant exchange with friends. IYOUIT records scanned Bluetooth or WLAN beacons and aggregates all data into context information that can be shared with others worldwide on the Web and on the mobile phone.

Software

IYOUIT has been developed by NTT Docomo Euro-Labs in Munich together with the Dutch Telematica Instituut in a joint research project on platform support for Context Awareness in mobile services and applications.[3][4][5] The application is available from the IYOUIT portal at http://www.iyouit.eu. It is written in Python and runs on the Nokia Series-S60 platform (see PyS60).

IYOUIT is based on its own framework of software components to host services and data sources.[6] Framework components, for instance, track the positions of users via GPS and cellular information and identify places of interest over time by learning form their past behavior. Each component offers an API, which allows programmers to integrate their own third party software components.

gollark: Oh, and they actually ship async synchronization primitives.
gollark: Yes, but they're complex.
gollark: Unlike Nim's, they have to manage accursed lifetime apiology, and actually have threadpools and good schedulers.
gollark: Also some indirection since there are multiple async runtimes.
gollark: Nim has some sort of thousand-line event loop thing at most, Rust has VAST convolutions of streams and stuff.

See also

References

  1. "Press Release: IYOUIT, a mobile alpha service to share personal experiences with others while on the go". DOCOMO Euro-Labs. June 26, 2008. Archived from the original on December 6, 2008. Retrieved 2008-07-04.
  2. "IYOUIT discontinued". 2011-10-20. Archived from the original on 2011-10-20. Retrieved 2019-03-10.
  3. P. Nurmi; J. Koolwaaij (July 2006). "Identifying meaningful locations" (PDF). Proceedings of the 3rd Annual International Conference on Mobile and Ubiquitous Systems: Networks and Services (MobiQuitous'06). San Jose, CA: IEEE Computer Society. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2007-07-09. Retrieved 2008-07-05.
  4. M. Wessel; M. Luther; M. Wagner (2007). "The difference a day makes – recognizing important events in daily context logs" (PDF). In P. Bouquet; J. Euzenat; C. Ghidini; F. B. Kessler; D. McGuinness; L. Serafini; P. Shvaiko; H. Wache (eds.). Proceedings of the CONTEXT’07 Workshop on Contexts and Ontologies. 298. Roskilde, Danmark: CEUR.org. pp. 100–112.
  5. M. Luther; Y. Fukazawa; M. Wagner; S. Kurakake (March 2008). "Situational reasoning for task-oriented mobile service recommendation". The Knowledge Engineering Review. 23 (1: Special Issue on Contexts and Ontologies: Theory, Practice and Applications): 7–19. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.490.8529. doi:10.1017/s0269888907001300.
  6. S. Böhm; J. Koolwaaij; M. Luther (June 2008). "Share whatever you like" (PDF). In R. Rouvoy; M. Caporuscio; M. Wagner (eds.). Proceedings of the First International DisCoTeC Workshop on Context-aware Adaptation Mechanisms for Pervasive and Ubiquitous Services (CAMPUS’08). Oslo, Norway: European Association of Software Science and Technology e.V. (EASST), Berlin. pp. 100–112. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-07-20. Retrieved 2008-07-05.
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