DIGITAL LIBRARY
MOBILE COMMUNITY NETWORKS INFORMATION INVESTIGATION FOR ADDITIONAL SIGNIFICANCE
King Saud University (SAUDI ARABIA)
About this paper:
Appears in: ICERI2013 Proceedings
Publication year: 2013
Page: 4577 (abstract only)
ISBN: 978-84-616-3847-5
ISSN: 2340-1095
Conference name: 6th International Conference of Education, Research and Innovation
Dates: 18-20 November, 2013
Location: Seville, Spain
Abstract:
The growing development of technology has altered the role of mobile phones which apart from individual communication devices are also influential devices for uploading and content. This information creates innovative challenges for the mobile industry which needs to be developed and regulate constructive and exciting services for the consumers in order to improve the functions of the mobile phone as an ordinary device. Accepting and utilizing mobile social networks sites and other Web 2.0 overhauls is estimated to be in line with a mobile technology development. Present mobile web technologies present similar user experience like computer since a user can simply create and distribute digital data from his/her mobile. However, present services and applications do not consist of methods for analyzing this gathering user-generated inputs (e.g. data, annotations), user exchanges (e.g. grading) and social connections (e.g. associations). Information pulled out from this huge user contribution and communication can recommend modified added-value services allowing more well-organized mobile usage. Our objective is to sketch this information investigation gaps in available services and going one step more to recommend possible solutions. Aspiring at social networks, we talk about new methods for investigating users’ actions and replica users’ social associations. The objective from this idea is to pull out the fundamental knowledge from users’ classification activities, users’ created content and users’ social associations within a social network. We present our points with investigative example services.
Keywords:
Mobile communication, Web 2.0, mobile usage.