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Ubiquitous Computing and Communication Journal (UBICC) (ISSN: 1992-8424)

PublisherUBICC

ISSN-L1992-8424

ISSN1992-8424

IF(Impact Factor)2024 Evaluation Pending

Website

Description

Ubiquitous Computing and Communication Journal (ISSN 1992-8424), is an international scientific journal dedicated to advancing the information and communication technology. With a world-wide membership, UBICC is a leading resource for computing professionals and students working in the disciplines of information technology and the impact on society. In particular UBICC journal provides global perspective on new developments in ubiquitous and pervasive computing technologies. The journal is committed to provide platform to present discuss and exchange experimental or theoretical results, trend-setting ideas in the emerging field of ubiquitous computing and related disciplines. UBICC publishes peer-reviewed, interesting, timely and accessible contributions from researchers from all over the globe. The Journal is an essential resource for researchers and educators who wish to understand the implications of ubiquitous computing. In addition to regular publication UBICC also participate in international conferences on related subject and publishes the selected papers with the special issue.
Readership
Scientists, engineers, researchers, graduate students, educators, managers and industrial professionals.
Editorial Board
The editorial board of Ubiquitous Computing and Communication Journal consists of leading specialists of the field from the globe. We expect to establish friendly communications with the colleagues from all over the globe so that we may enhance our mutual understanding and cooperation and jointly contribute to the development of information technology.
Editor's Choice
Celebrating the life and work of Charles P. Thacker
UbiCC has named Charles P. Thacker the announced for 2010 UbiCC A.M. Turing Award for his pioneering design and realization of the Alto, the first modern personal computer, and the prototype for networked personal computers. Alto incorporated bitmap (TV-like) displays, which enable modern graphical user interfaces (GUIs), including What You See Is What You Get (WYSIWYG) editors. Thacker's design, which he built while at Xerox PARC (Palo Alto Research Center), reflected a new vision of a self-sufficient, networked computer on every desk, equipped with innovations that are standard in today's models.

Last modified: 2014-04-24 05:33:15

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