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NexJ Express/I2I

20 bytes added, 08:04, 26 September 2012
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'''Technical Detailed proposal: 1-2 pages'''
''intro''
The innovative use of smartphones has opened up a significant business opportunity for integrating mobile devices with health care systems. Recognizing the market potential, major software vendors have started promoting mobile programming models and tools that are tailored to the communication protocols built into the medical devices. Recent progress in the design of medical devices, with their communication infrastructures, has increased the likelihood of successful interactions between mobile and medical devices.
''technical issues''
There are already marketed solutions and architectures that promote and facilitate the development of adaptive mobile health applications (e.g., the NexJ Personal Health Coaching mobile app). However, the lack of unified standards in the mobile computing field, combined with an increasing variety of medical devices, requires a concentrated research effort for designing ubiquitous mobile medical applications. The adoption of one of the proprietary protocol specifications, as connectivity standard, can easily break the underlying communication infrastructure for a different mobile platform (for example iOS vs. Android). The design, development and delivery of a generic connectivity layer is a complex task.
''applied research problem''
Therefore, the purpose of this applied research is to investigate, design and develop reusable software components that can be dynamically combined to permit the ubiquitous connectivity by various wireless communication protocols.
''Provide a work plan and relate it to the milestone schedule''
The work plan is subject to change depending on market conditions and NexJ requirements:
''Describe the roles of any students''
This project is a mobile health coaching solution built upon an open health platform. The students will develop technologies that enable wireless connectivity between medical measurement devices and the smart phone solution. Such development can only be done if the mobile solution is divided into sufficiently modular parts, as the connectivity research is done in tandem with the mobile solution implementation. This type of structure has the benefit of parallel teams working simultaneously. The benefits for the students being part of such a project is the direct exposure to new and emerging technologies, a contribution to the open health movement and finally exposure to professional developers and their development processes and designs. Experience of this caliber has far reaching applications and depth.

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