J. Ott, E. Hyytiä, P. Lassila, T. Vaegs and J. Kangasharju, Floating Content: Information Sharing in Urban Areas, in IEEE PerCom, 2011, Seattle, USA.
Abstract: Content sharing using personal web pages, blogs, or online social networks is a common means for people to maintain contact with their friends, colleagues, and acquaintances. While such means are essential to overcome distances, using infrastructure services for location-based services may not be desirable. In this paper, we analyze a fully distributed variant of an ephemeral content sharing service, solely dependent on the mobile devices in the vicinity using principles of opportunistic networking. The net result is a best effort service for floating content in which: 1) information dissemination is geographically limited; 2) the lifetime and spreading of information depends on interested nodes being available; 3) content can only be created and distributed locally; and 4) content can only be added, but not explicitly deleted. First we present our system design and summarize its analytical modeling. Then we perform extensive evaluation for a map-based mobility model in downtown Helsinki to assess the operational range for floating content, which, at the same time also validate the analytical results obtained for a more abstract model of the system.
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BibTeX entry:
@inproceedings{ott-percom-2011, author = {J{\"o}rg Ott and Esa Hyyti{\"a} and Pasi Lassila and Tobias Vaegs and Jussi Kangasharju}, title = {Floating Content: Information Sharing in Urban Areas}, booktitle = {{IEEE} {PerCom}}, year = {2011}, month = {Mar.}, address = {Seattle, USA}, doiopt = {10.1109/PERCOM.2011.5767578}, }