Mobile phones may be the right devices for supporting developing world accessibility, but is the WWW the right service delivery

Posted by LeighJaschke on Jul 14, 2009
Author: 
Parikh, Tapan S.
ISSN/ISBN Number: 
159593281
Publication Type: 
Report/White paper
Publication Date: 
Jan 2006
Publisher/Journal: 
ACM New York, NY, USA
Abstract: 

In this paper we detail the synergies we have observed be-
tween the features and limitations of mobile phones, and the
usability and accessibility requirements of rural developing
world users. This includes support for sequential interac-
tion, multimedia input and output, asynchronous messag-
ing and a universally familiar numeric keypad. However,
we argue that the WWW as currently conceived may be an
inappropriate model for delivering mobile information ser-
vices in this context. We highlight a number of tensions we
have observed between the traditional web model, and the
design synergies that we have uncovered. To demonstrate
an alternative framework, we describe CAM | a platform
for delivering mobile information services in the rural devel-
oping world. Supporting scripted execution, media-driven,
tangible interaction as well as an online usage model, CAM
is uniquely adapted both to rural accessibility requirements
and the inherent capabilities of mobile phones. By learning
from the CAM design, we can either improve the design of
existing mobile web standards and services, or implement a
more appropriate framework altogether.

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Global Regions: 
Upload Paper: 
Citation: 
Parikh, Tapan S. (2006) Mobile phones may be the right devices for supporting developing world accessibility, but is the WWW the right service delivery . ACM International Conference Proceeding Series; Vol. 134 archive Proceedings of the 2006 international cross-disciplinary workshop on Web accessibility (W4A): Building the mobile web: rediscovering accessibility? table of contents Edinburgh, U.K. SESSION: Practice related table of contents Pages: 143 - 146 Year of Publication: 2006 ISBN:1-59593-281-X . Association for Computing Machinery (ACM).
Mobile phones may be the right devices for supporting developing world accessibility, but is the WWW the right service delivery data sheet 1152 Views
Author: 
Parikh, Tapan S.
ISSN/ISBN Number: 
159593281
Publication Type: 
Report/White paper
Publication Date: 
Jan 2006
Publisher/Journal: 
ACM New York, NY, USA
Abstract: 

In this paper we detail the synergies we have observed be-
tween the features and limitations of mobile phones, and the
usability and accessibility requirements of rural developing
world users. This includes support for sequential interac-
tion, multimedia input and output, asynchronous messag-
ing and a universally familiar numeric keypad. However,
we argue that the WWW as currently conceived may be an
inappropriate model for delivering mobile information ser-
vices in this context. We highlight a number of tensions we
have observed between the traditional web model, and the
design synergies that we have uncovered. To demonstrate
an alternative framework, we describe CAM | a platform
for delivering mobile information services in the rural devel-
oping world. Supporting scripted execution, media-driven,
tangible interaction as well as an online usage model, CAM
is uniquely adapted both to rural accessibility requirements
and the inherent capabilities of mobile phones. By learning
from the CAM design, we can either improve the design of
existing mobile web standards and services, or implement a
more appropriate framework altogether.

Countries: 
Global Regions: 
Upload Paper: 
Citation: 
Parikh, Tapan S. (2006) Mobile phones may be the right devices for supporting developing world accessibility, but is the WWW the right service delivery . ACM International Conference Proceeding Series; Vol. 134 archive Proceedings of the 2006 international cross-disciplinary workshop on Web accessibility (W4A): Building the mobile web: rediscovering accessibility? table of contents Edinburgh, U.K. SESSION: Practice related table of contents Pages: 143 - 146 Year of Publication: 2006 ISBN:1-59593-281-X . Association for Computing Machinery (ACM).

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