[117473] |
Title: WearIT@work: Toward Real-World Industrial Wearable Computing. |
Written by: Paul Lukowicz and Andreas Timm-Giel and Michael Lawo and Otthein Herzog |
in: <em>IEEE Pervasive Computing Magazine</em>. oct (2007). |
Volume: <strong>6</strong>. Number: (4), |
on pages: 8--13 |
Chapter: |
Editor: |
Publisher: IEEE: |
Series: |
Address: |
Edition: |
ISBN: |
how published: |
Organization: |
School: |
Institution: |
Type: |
DOI: |
URL: http://pollux.et6.tu-harburg.de/481/ |
ARXIVID: |
PMID: |
Note:
Abstract: Wearable computers are often cited as an enabling technology for out-of-office applications. In fact, there has been a considerable amount of work on industrial applications of wearables. However, with the notable exception of the symbol arm-worn system, this research has had little impact on industrial practice. The wearIT@work project is a 4 1/2-year effort financed by the European Union and aimed at facilitating real-life industrial deployment of wearable technology. The project is at the end of its third year. With 42 partners and a project funding of 23.7 million Euro (half of which comes from the EU), this consortium is the largest civilian wearable-computing effort worldwide. We are organizing the project around four pilot applications - aircraft maintenance, car production, healthcare, and emergency response - that drive the work in a bottom-up, user-centered approach.
[117473] |
Title: WearIT@work: Toward Real-World Industrial Wearable Computing. |
Written by: Paul Lukowicz and Andreas Timm-Giel and Michael Lawo and Otthein Herzog |
in: <em>IEEE Pervasive Computing Magazine</em>. oct (2007). |
Volume: <strong>6</strong>. Number: (4), |
on pages: 8--13 |
Chapter: |
Editor: |
Publisher: IEEE: |
Series: |
Address: |
Edition: |
ISBN: |
how published: |
Organization: |
School: |
Institution: |
Type: |
DOI: |
URL: http://pollux.et6.tu-harburg.de/481/ |
ARXIVID: |
PMID: |
Note:
Abstract: Wearable computers are often cited as an enabling technology for out-of-office applications. In fact, there has been a considerable amount of work on industrial applications of wearables. However, with the notable exception of the symbol arm-worn system, this research has had little impact on industrial practice. The wearIT@work project is a 4 1/2-year effort financed by the European Union and aimed at facilitating real-life industrial deployment of wearable technology. The project is at the end of its third year. With 42 partners and a project funding of 23.7 million Euro (half of which comes from the EU), this consortium is the largest civilian wearable-computing effort worldwide. We are organizing the project around four pilot applications - aircraft maintenance, car production, healthcare, and emergency response - that drive the work in a bottom-up, user-centered approach.
[117473] |
Title: WearIT@work: Toward Real-World Industrial Wearable Computing. |
Written by: Paul Lukowicz and Andreas Timm-Giel and Michael Lawo and Otthein Herzog |
in: <em>IEEE Pervasive Computing Magazine</em>. oct (2007). |
Volume: <strong>6</strong>. Number: (4), |
on pages: 8--13 |
Chapter: |
Editor: |
Publisher: IEEE: |
Series: |
Address: |
Edition: |
ISBN: |
how published: |
Organization: |
School: |
Institution: |
Type: |
DOI: |
URL: http://pollux.et6.tu-harburg.de/481/ |
ARXIVID: |
PMID: |
Note:
Abstract: Wearable computers are often cited as an enabling technology for out-of-office applications. In fact, there has been a considerable amount of work on industrial applications of wearables. However, with the notable exception of the symbol arm-worn system, this research has had little impact on industrial practice. The wearIT@work project is a 4 1/2-year effort financed by the European Union and aimed at facilitating real-life industrial deployment of wearable technology. The project is at the end of its third year. With 42 partners and a project funding of 23.7 million Euro (half of which comes from the EU), this consortium is the largest civilian wearable-computing effort worldwide. We are organizing the project around four pilot applications - aircraft maintenance, car production, healthcare, and emergency response - that drive the work in a bottom-up, user-centered approach.
[117473] |
Title: WearIT@work: Toward Real-World Industrial Wearable Computing. |
Written by: Paul Lukowicz and Andreas Timm-Giel and Michael Lawo and Otthein Herzog |
in: <em>IEEE Pervasive Computing Magazine</em>. oct (2007). |
Volume: <strong>6</strong>. Number: (4), |
on pages: 8--13 |
Chapter: |
Editor: |
Publisher: IEEE: |
Series: |
Address: |
Edition: |
ISBN: |
how published: |
Organization: |
School: |
Institution: |
Type: |
DOI: |
URL: http://pollux.et6.tu-harburg.de/481/ |
ARXIVID: |
PMID: |
Note:
Abstract: Wearable computers are often cited as an enabling technology for out-of-office applications. In fact, there has been a considerable amount of work on industrial applications of wearables. However, with the notable exception of the symbol arm-worn system, this research has had little impact on industrial practice. The wearIT@work project is a 4 1/2-year effort financed by the European Union and aimed at facilitating real-life industrial deployment of wearable technology. The project is at the end of its third year. With 42 partners and a project funding of 23.7 million Euro (half of which comes from the EU), this consortium is the largest civilian wearable-computing effort worldwide. We are organizing the project around four pilot applications - aircraft maintenance, car production, healthcare, and emergency response - that drive the work in a bottom-up, user-centered approach.
[117473] |
Title: WearIT@work: Toward Real-World Industrial Wearable Computing. |
Written by: Paul Lukowicz and Andreas Timm-Giel and Michael Lawo and Otthein Herzog |
in: <em>IEEE Pervasive Computing Magazine</em>. oct (2007). |
Volume: <strong>6</strong>. Number: (4), |
on pages: 8--13 |
Chapter: |
Editor: |
Publisher: IEEE: |
Series: |
Address: |
Edition: |
ISBN: |
how published: |
Organization: |
School: |
Institution: |
Type: |
DOI: |
URL: http://pollux.et6.tu-harburg.de/481/ |
ARXIVID: |
PMID: |
Note:
Abstract: Wearable computers are often cited as an enabling technology for out-of-office applications. In fact, there has been a considerable amount of work on industrial applications of wearables. However, with the notable exception of the symbol arm-worn system, this research has had little impact on industrial practice. The wearIT@work project is a 4 1/2-year effort financed by the European Union and aimed at facilitating real-life industrial deployment of wearable technology. The project is at the end of its third year. With 42 partners and a project funding of 23.7 million Euro (half of which comes from the EU), this consortium is the largest civilian wearable-computing effort worldwide. We are organizing the project around four pilot applications - aircraft maintenance, car production, healthcare, and emergency response - that drive the work in a bottom-up, user-centered approach.
[117473] |
Title: WearIT@work: Toward Real-World Industrial Wearable Computing. |
Written by: Paul Lukowicz and Andreas Timm-Giel and Michael Lawo and Otthein Herzog |
in: <em>IEEE Pervasive Computing Magazine</em>. oct (2007). |
Volume: <strong>6</strong>. Number: (4), |
on pages: 8--13 |
Chapter: |
Editor: |
Publisher: IEEE: |
Series: |
Address: |
Edition: |
ISBN: |
how published: |
Organization: |
School: |
Institution: |
Type: |
DOI: |
URL: http://pollux.et6.tu-harburg.de/481/ |
ARXIVID: |
PMID: |
Note:
Abstract: Wearable computers are often cited as an enabling technology for out-of-office applications. In fact, there has been a considerable amount of work on industrial applications of wearables. However, with the notable exception of the symbol arm-worn system, this research has had little impact on industrial practice. The wearIT@work project is a 4 1/2-year effort financed by the European Union and aimed at facilitating real-life industrial deployment of wearable technology. The project is at the end of its third year. With 42 partners and a project funding of 23.7 million Euro (half of which comes from the EU), this consortium is the largest civilian wearable-computing effort worldwide. We are organizing the project around four pilot applications - aircraft maintenance, car production, healthcare, and emergency response - that drive the work in a bottom-up, user-centered approach.
[117473] |
Title: WearIT@work: Toward Real-World Industrial Wearable Computing. |
Written by: Paul Lukowicz and Andreas Timm-Giel and Michael Lawo and Otthein Herzog |
in: <em>IEEE Pervasive Computing Magazine</em>. oct (2007). |
Volume: <strong>6</strong>. Number: (4), |
on pages: 8--13 |
Chapter: |
Editor: |
Publisher: IEEE: |
Series: |
Address: |
Edition: |
ISBN: |
how published: |
Organization: |
School: |
Institution: |
Type: |
DOI: |
URL: http://pollux.et6.tu-harburg.de/481/ |
ARXIVID: |
PMID: |
Note:
Abstract: Wearable computers are often cited as an enabling technology for out-of-office applications. In fact, there has been a considerable amount of work on industrial applications of wearables. However, with the notable exception of the symbol arm-worn system, this research has had little impact on industrial practice. The wearIT@work project is a 4 1/2-year effort financed by the European Union and aimed at facilitating real-life industrial deployment of wearable technology. The project is at the end of its third year. With 42 partners and a project funding of 23.7 million Euro (half of which comes from the EU), this consortium is the largest civilian wearable-computing effort worldwide. We are organizing the project around four pilot applications - aircraft maintenance, car production, healthcare, and emergency response - that drive the work in a bottom-up, user-centered approach.