3rd International ICST Conference on Collaborative Computing: Networking, Applications and Worksharin

Research Article

Peer2Schedule - An Experimental Peer-to-peer Application to Support Present Collaboration

  • @INPROCEEDINGS{10.1109/COLCOM.2007.4553867,
        author={Alf  Inge Wang and Peter Nicolai Motzfeldt},
        title={Peer2Schedule - An Experimental Peer-to-peer Application to Support Present Collaboration},
        proceedings={3rd International ICST Conference on Collaborative Computing: Networking, Applications and Worksharin},
        publisher={IEEE},
        proceedings_a={COLLABORATECOM},
        year={2008},
        month={6},
        keywords={Collaborative applications Mobile ad hoc networks Peer-to-peer networks Privacy},
        doi={10.1109/COLCOM.2007.4553867}
    }
    
  • Alf Inge Wang
    Peter Nicolai Motzfeldt
    Year: 2008
    Peer2Schedule - An Experimental Peer-to-peer Application to Support Present Collaboration
    COLLABORATECOM
    IEEE
    DOI: 10.1109/COLCOM.2007.4553867
Alf Inge Wang1,*, Peter Nicolai Motzfeldt1,*
  • 1: Dept. of Computer and Information Science, Norwegian University of Science and Technology, N-7491 Trondheim, Norway
*Contact email: alfw@idi.ntnu.no, peternic@idi.ntnu.no

Abstract

This paper describes experiences from implementing an experimental mobile peer-to-peer application called Peer2Schedule aimed at improving and supporting collaboration where people are collocated. Peer2Schedule was built on top of the Peer2Me framework that provides management of mobile ad hoc networks over Bluetooth. The goal of the Peer2Schedule project can be divided into three main areas. 1) To develop a collaborative peer-to-peer application to evaluate the usefulness of such applications; 2) to evaluate the technical limitations of J2ME and Bluetooth in this domain; and 3) to implement and evaluate a mobile application to improve present ad-hoc collaboration. In this paper we also investigates the social and network issues related to such applications. Our findings indicates that Bluetooth and J2ME are useful technology to implement such applications, but the long time to establish connections and security issues in Bluetooth reduce the usability of such applications. In addition, it is essential that collaborative peerto- peer applications must be developed as open source projects, to allow the users of such applications to evaluate the source code to assess how the application handles privacy. Finally, the paper elaborates on how the problem domain affects how the control-flow is managed in peer-to-peer applications.