학술논문

An investigation of the impact of mobile phone and PDA interfaces on the usability of mobile-commerce applications
Document Type
Conference
Source
Proceedings 3rd IEEE International Workshop on System-on-Chip for Real-Time Applications Networked appliances Networked Appliances, 2002. Liverpool. Proceedings. 2002 IEEE 5th International Workshop on. :90-95 2002
Subject
Communication, Networking and Broadcast Technologies
Computing and Processing
Components, Circuits, Devices and Systems
Mobile handsets
Usability
Business
Security
User interfaces
Informatics
Electronic commerce
Ground penetrating radar
Cellular phones
Springs
Language
Abstract
With the introduction of faster wireless networking standards opportunities arise to transport more e-commerce applications to wireless devices (hence, mobile, or m-commerce). The wireless device with which most people are familiar is the mobile phone. It is in the interests of commercial organizations for people to use their phones for m-commerce tasks. In addition, various handheld and pocket computer platforms have appeared in the market place with wireless connectivity ability (albeit via a mobile phone connection in many cases). Given the different capabilities of the various devices it is important to know whether applications can be developed to run on multiple mobile platforms with little or no platform-specific alteration. We describe a small pilot study to explore some usability and user perception issues of m-commerce across different applications and wireless device platforms. Factors such as task efficiency, user-error rate, user perception, memorability, and user workload were measured on two applications developed using J2ME running on two different wireless devices. The results indicated no significant differences in usability across platform type, thus supporting the notion that with frameworks such as J2ME single applications can be developed and deployed across multiple device platforms with little impact on usability or user perception. Some statistically significant differences were found in performance between the two applications.