The arrival of low-cost smart-phones and tablets is a game-changing event for mobile data collection, due to a convergence of features:
As a result of this convergence we can, for the first time, place location-recording electronic data collectors in the hands of every team member at very modest cost. Lots of people have been experimenting with tablets, smart pens etc. but these projects, while often successful in themselves, will not generally be adopted beyond a limited public of connected projects (e.g. working in the same area or working out of the same institution). That is because they are adapted to specific circumstances / modes of operation; the investment in making systems generic is too high for an individual project - it is not cost effective.
Which is where FAIMS comes in. Through a $1M grant plus $1M co-investment, FAIMS has focussed on building generic customisable capabilities at a scale not available to individual projects. FAIMS started with a four day requirements-gathering international workshop (August 2012), which assembled 50 people for the full workshop (80 on the first day), 40+ partners, a very wide cross-section of the archaeological community in Australia plus international participation (ADS, tDAR, Open Context). FAIMS also has an extremely active core team with a dedicated technical lead. The team listened to what people had to say and took things on board, for instance the original plan was to do live mesh synchronisation of tablets and to support measurements using multiple tablets; the workshop suggested this would not work and that it would be better to think in terms of a daily fieldwork cycle and building a synchronisation server which would sync all the tablets in the field house at the end of the day, and that methodology has been adopted
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