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Personal ICT Ensembles and Ubiquitous Information Systems Environments: Key Issues and Research Implications

journal contribution
posted on 2013-12-01, 00:00 authored by Rens ScheepersRens Scheepers, C Middleton
Personal information and communication technologies (ICTs) have become commonplace. Today many people own, or have access to, a range of different computing and communication devices, information technologies, and services, which they incorporate into their everyday routines. Increasingly, these technologies impact the way that individuals work, socialize, and play. Workers are bringing their personal ICTs to the office, and organizations are tailoring their computing environments toward ubiquitous integration with personal ICTs. These developments are opening up new ways of working, but they also create new challenges for organizations in accommodating this “nonaffiliated” use as part of their information systems environments. In this article we propose a framework for analyzing the composition and impact of personal ICT ensembles. The framework is positioned as pre-theory that invites further development and empirical testing. We illustrate how the proposed framework could be applied to consider personal ICT use across the work/home context. Several implications stemming from the notion of a personal ICT ensemble are highlighted, including practical considerations for nonaffiliated use in organizations. We conclude with suggestions for further development of the proposed framework.

History

Journal

Communications of the Association for Information Systems

Volume

33

Issue

1

Season

Article 22

Pagination

381 - 392

Publisher

Association for Information Systems

Location

Atlanta, Ga.

ISSN

1529-3181

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal; C Journal article