Smart ESI, a new School model
In the 80s, Mark Weiser, considered the father of ubiquitous computing, referred to it for the first time as the tendency to integrate technology into people's daily lives, so that it became omnipresent (in any location). , format and time) and indistinguishable from technology explicit that people use (mobile phones, tablets, laptops, etc.) [1]. This paved the way towards the search for user interfaces that would allow interaction with an embedded system, that is, an electronic device embedded in another larger device, for example a television, a refrigerator or a scooter. The underlying technologies that support ubiquitous computing include microelectronics, communications, distributed systems, and user interfaces, among others.