Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where William Kress Bodin is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by William Kress Bodin.


2014 11th International Conference & Expo on Emerging Technologies for a Smarter World (CEWIT) | 2014

Think smart and communicate fast! Are you mobile in the Cloud?

William Kress Bodin; David Jaramillo; Sanjeev Kumar V. Marimekala; Jan Borowski

The primary focus of this paper is to outline the evolution of mobile technologies and the adoption of these technologies in the IT industry. The paper explores how mobile is used and how it impacts our daily lives. Mobile technology has evolved over a decade, and with smart devices, its applicability and usage has increased drastically, for both personal and business use. Mobile provides increasingly fast access to back-end data sources. The Cloud Computing Environment (CCE) enhances the capabilities of mobile environments, while promoting innovation for next generation mobile technologies. CCE also provides analytics, elastic and scalable environments, secure composable mobile services, rapid application development, and deployment with reduced resources and lower operational costs. With these advanced capabilities, stakeholders are looking for mobile applications that are born on the Cloud. In addition, this paper also describes the challenges a data center could face when implementing a secure mobile infrastructure in a CCE, with lessons learned from actual case studies.


2015 12th International Conference & Expo on Emerging Technologies for a Smarter World (CEWIT) | 2015

Security challenges and data implications by using smartwatch devices in the enterprise

William Kress Bodin; David Jaramillo; Sanjeev Kumar V. Marimekala; Matt Ganis

In the age of the Internet of Things, use of Smartwatch devices in the enterprise is evolving rapidly and many companies are exploring, adopting and researching the use of these devices in the Enterprise IT (Information Technology). The biggest challenge presented to an organization is understanding how to integrate these devices with the back end systems, building the data correlation and analytics while ensuring the security of the overall systems. The core objective of this paper is to provide a brief overview of such security challenges and data exposures to be considered. The research effort focuses on three key questions: 1. Data: how will we integrate these data streams into of physical world instrumentation with all of our existing data? 2. Security: how can pervasive sensing and analytics systems preserve and protect user security? 3. Usability: what hardware and software systems will make developing new intelligent and secure Smartwatch applications as easy as a modern web application? This area of research is in the early stages and through this paper we attempt to bring different views on how data, security and usability is important for Enterprise IT to adopt this type of Internet of Things (IoT) device in the Enterprise.


Archive | 2008

Free-space gesture recognition for transaction security and command processing

William Kress Bodin


Archive | 2002

Supplemental diagnostic and services resource planning for mobile systems

William Kress Bodin; Derral C. Thorson


Archive | 2002

Ad hoc data sharing in virtual team rooms

William Kress Bodin


Archive | 2002

Inventory controls with radio frequency identification

William Kress Bodin; Derral C. Thorson; Parag Himanshu Shah


Archive | 2008

Location based services revenue sharing and cost offsetting

William Kress Bodin


Archive | 2006

Providing disparate content as a playlist of media files

William Kress Bodin; David Jaramillo; Jesse W. Redman; Derral C. Thorson


Archive | 2006

Audio Menus Describing Media Contents of Media Players

William Kress Bodin; David Jaramillo; Jerry W. Redman; Derral C. Thorson


Archive | 2002

Location-based intelligent remote vehicle function control

William Kress Bodin

Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge