Social Disclosure Of Place: From Location Technology to Communication Practices
- Ian Smith ,
- Sunny Consolvo ,
- Anthony LaMarca ,
- Jeffrey Hightower ,
- James Scott ,
- Timothy Sohn ,
- Jeff Hughes ,
- Giovanni Iachello ,
- Gregory D. Abowd
Proceedings of the 3rd International Conference on Pervasive Computing (Pervasive 2005) |
Published by Springer Verlag
Communication of one’s location as part of a social discourse is common practice, and we use a variety of technologies to satisfy this need. This practice suggests a potentially useful capability that technology may support more directly. We present such a social location disclosure service, Reno, designed for use on a common mobile phone platform. We describe the guiding principles that dictate parameters for creating a usable, useful and ubiquitous service and we report on a pilot study of use of Reno for a realistic social network. Our preliminary results reveal the competing factors for a system that facilitates both manual and automatic location disclosure, and the role social context plays in making such a lightweight communication solution work.