RE: Terminology

From: John W Noerenberg II ^lt;jwn2@qualcomm.com>
Date: Wed Dec 12 2001 - 19:46:03 EST

At 6:14 PM -0500 12/12/01, Brian Rosen wrote:
>I'm going to have to respond properly to this proposal some time
>when I can spend
>a while extracting the ideas from it. It's pretty dense, and has a lot of new
>terminology.

I'll listen attentively to any comments you can offer. The
terminology is different than some of what we've been kicking around.
Partly its because I'm lazy -- the version of the document that I've
written uses this terminology, and I didn't take the time to
translate it. But it's also because by introducing terms that I've
defined, I can avoid confusion over reusing terms that haven't been
defined as I've chosen.

My hope is the concepts align sufficiently with others and are
(hopefully) specific enough to be useful.

>
>One of the key things I think you should do is to eliminate the word "mobile".
>There should be no reference to anything mobile in this work except for
>scenarios. It has to work in a mobile system, but it also has to work as well
>in a fixed system. It has to work in an enterprise, in a hospital
>and in a home
>as well as in a carrier network.

And of course you've identified one that I didn't define at all. I
agree completely with your concern for the implication of the word
"mobile". "Mobile Station" in the context of my model should be taken
to mean an entity with a location in space than can change
arbitrarily, and the precision with which its location is known has
value. It is not specifically a wireless device, although,
admittedly I have that as a tacit assumption. However, there should
be nothing about the model which requires that it be a wireless
device (If it does I'd better fix that). Already you've improved my
unpublished draft! <grin>

The value of the location information is what induces concern for how
private the owner considers the information to be. It would be
useful to define a value function. I suspect the value function
would be proportional to "privacy." A quantitative measure is
tricky, because "privacy" may be too subjective for a quantitative
description. For now, I'm going to assume we can define a value
function that isn't simply binary.

-- 
john noerenberg
jwn2@qualcomm.com
   ----------------------------------------------------------------------
   While the belief we  have found the Answer can separate us
   and make us forget our humanity, it is the seeking that continues
   to bring us together, the makes and keeps us human.
   -- Daniel J. Boorstin, "The Seekers", 1998
   ----------------------------------------------------------------------
Received on Wed Dec 12 19:52:56 2001

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