The SESERV consortium organised a scientific seminar ‘The Future Internet: The Social Nature of Technical Choices’ at St. Anne’s College,
University of Oxford, UK.
The workshop aimed to bridge the gap between those who study and those who build the Internet by supporting
discussion and debate within the multidisciplinary community of researchers and professionals working on various aspects of the Future
Internet. The main objective of the workshop was to explore and discuss with a community of experts the socio-economic aspects that
affect the Future Internet, and conversely the way that the Future Internet will affect society, government, and business.
who attended the Oxford SESERV workshop. All the participants answered the following questions:
1. How do you think your project benefits a broader European drive to increase innovation?
2. What are the main social and economic problems, constraints or barriers that you face when developing your work?
3. Who are the stakeholders of your project? Why are they important for your project?
4. What do you know of the EU Digital Agenda? How is the DA relevant for your project?
5. What mechanism or strategies do you think are needed to foster your work (either from the public sector or from other entities)?
Join us
Kevin Doolin - Societies
SOCIETIES develops a complete, integrated Community Smart Space (CSS), which extends pervasive systems beyond the individual to dynamic communities of users. CSSs embraces on-line community services, such as social networking in order to offer new and powerful ways of working, communicating and socialising. |
Nick Wainwright - EffectsPlus
Effectsplus coordinates the Trust and Security, Privacy, and Compliance activities for the Future Internet through the Future Internet Assembly. It collaborates in the Clustering of Trust and Security projects. Effectsplus provides a channel for dissemination of R&D results and also builds communities of interests in trust and security. |
Martin Serrano - Societies
SOCIETIES develops a complete, integrated Community Smart Space (CSS), which extends pervasive systems beyond the individual to dynamic communities of users. CSSs embraces on-line community services, such as social networking in order to offer new and powerful ways of working, communicating and socialising.
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Ian Graham - MyFIRE (Future Internet Research and Experimentation)
MyFIRE project aims to develop the use of the FIRE experimental facilities in Europe by increasing the awareness of testing related best practices both for industry-led and academia-driven testing activities. MyFIRE encourages open dialogue between the ICT networking research communities and experts from key areas of sociology, policy makers, economic models and standard. |
Daniel Sebastao - SAIL
SAIL designs technologies for the Networks of the Future and develop techniques to transition from today’s networks to such future concepts. SAIL leverages state-of-the-art architectures and technologies, extends them as needed, and integrates them. SAIL uses experimentally-driven research, building prototypes that will validate the advantages in concrete use cases. |
Magnus Eriksson - TA2 (“Together Anywhere, Together Anytime”)
TA2 building systems that allow people to communicate and engage among groups of people separated in space and time. TA2 seeks to explore how technology can support group to group communication. |
Ben Bashford - Council
Council makes forecasts through prototyping, focusing on the granularity of experience of input models, devices and the experiences of people with the devices, and the quality of output that are measured in terms of real innovation in everyday life.
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Elwyn Brian Davies - N4C
N4C is a research project which has developed solutions for basic Internet access in remote regions where it is not simple, cheap or, even, feasible to have Internet in any of the conventional ways that town dwellers have come to expect. |
Mike Surridge - GENESI-DEC
GENESI-DEC established open data and services access, allowing European and worldwide Digital Earth Communities to seamlessly access, produce and share data, information, products and knowledge. GENESI-DEC provide decision-support tools to a wide variety of users, allowing decision makers to access an extraordinary range of information at their desk. |
Peter Ljungstrand -TA2 (“Together Anywhere, Together Anytime”)
TA2 building systems that allow people to communicate and engage more easily among groups of people separated in space and time. TA2 seeks to explore how technology can support group to group communication. |
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