The project is known as Infrastructure for Integrated Services, or ISIS, and incorporates five partner organizations and institutions. The ISIS platform includes a programming tool for app developers, called Arctis. Developed by researchers at the Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Arctis is based around simply putting virtual building blocks together to form complete apps, although more complex arrangements are also possible.
When apps are complete, users can purchase and download them from the onlineISIS app store, which is already up and running. Different apps could be combined in order to get various devices working together, which is where the ICE Composition Engine would come in. Installed on a modem, decoder or adapter in the home, it would be in charge of overseeing the relationships between devices, and making sure that they could all communicate effectively with one another.
Users would access ICE via the Puzzle interface program. As its name implies, Puzzle would allow users to link apps/devices together onscreen, with ICE figuring out how to make the arrangements work in the real world.
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