Mobile Computing in Digital Ecosystems: Design Issues and Challenges
Gabriele D'Angelo, Stefano Ferretti, Vittorio Ghini, Fabio Panzieri

TL;DR
This paper discusses the design issues and challenges in creating digital ecosystems using mobile devices, emphasizing resource management, peer-to-peer interactions, and the need for a supporting middleware framework.
Contribution
It proposes a middleware framework to integrate existing technologies for digital ecosystems and presents preliminary experimental results demonstrating its potential.
Findings
Most required solutions and technologies are available.
A middleware framework can support effective integration.
Preliminary experiments show promising results.
Abstract
In this paper we argue that the set of wireless, mobile devices (e.g., portable telephones, tablet PCs, GPS navigators, media players) commonly used by human users enables the construction of what we term a digital ecosystem, i.e., an ecosystem constructed out of so-called digital organisms (see below), that can foster the development of novel distributed services. In this context, a human user equipped with his/her own mobile devices, can be though of as a digital organism (DO), a subsystem characterized by a set of peculiar features and resources it can offer to the rest of the ecosystem for use from its peer DOs. The internal organization of the DO must address issues of management of its own resources, including power consumption. Inside the DO and among DOs, peer-to-peer interaction mechanisms can be conveniently deployed to favor resource sharing and data dissemination. Throughout…
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