Authors
Peter Tolmie, Andy Crabtree, Stefan Egglestone, Jan Humble, Chris Greenhalgh, Tom Rodden
Publication date
2010/4
Journal
Personal and Ubiquitous Computing
Volume
14
Pages
181-196
Publisher
Springer-Verlag
Description
Deploying UbiComp in real homes is central to realizing Weiser’s grand vision of ‘invisible’ computing. It is essential to moving design out of the lab and making it into an unremarkable feature of everyday life. Deployment can be problematic, however, and in ways that a number of researchers have already pointed to. In this paper, we wish to complement the community’s growing understanding of challenges to deployment. We focus on ‘digital plumbing’—i.e., the mundane work involved in installing ubiquitous computing in real homes. Digital plumbing characterizes the act of deployment. It draws attention to the work of installation: to the collaborative effort of co-situating prototypical technologies in real homes, to the competences involved, the practical troubles encountered, and the demands that real world settings place on the enterprise. We provide an ethnographic study of the work. It makes visible the …
Total citations
20102011201220132014201520162017201820192020202120222023256355577333410
Scholar articles
P Tolmie, A Crabtree, S Egglestone, J Humble… - Personal and Ubiquitous Computing, 2010