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Vol. 4, No. 2, 2006
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[ contents
] Vol 4, No 2, 2006, pp: 108-127
Re-Conceptualizing
the Mobile Phone – From Telephone to Collective Interfaces
Author: Adriana de Souza
e Silva |
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abstract |
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This paper conceptualizes mobile phones
as beyond two-way voice communication technologies, envisioning
the mobile device as a social collective medium instead
of a private personal technology. It addresses three central
research questions: (1) What are the characteristics of
mobile phones that differentiates them from traditional
fixed phones? (2) What are some current uses of mobile
interfaces that transform them into social collective
media instead of private two-way voice communication devices?
(3) What are the possible future developments of the mobile
interface that these characteristics might lead to? Taking
into consideration that new meanings for new interfaces
are culturally and socially created, the paper addresses
the emergence of social mobile networks created via mobile
technologies. These networks emerge when cell phone use
shifts from mobile telephone to a type of micro-computer,
location aware device and internet connection interface.
Keywords: Cell phones; social networks;
location awareness; collective interfaces; 4G; mobile
technologies.
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Adriana
de Souza e Silva is an assistant professor in the Department
of Communication at North Carolina State University (NCSU),
USA. Her research focuses on how new media interfaces
change our relationship to space and create new social
environments via media art and pervasive games.
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