ARCHIVED PROJECT : not updated since December 2019 !!!
The documentation of Traceur Fabmob, a fork of e-mission, an open source phone-based personal mobility tracking software from UC Berkeley. The doc is in English. (French docs are relative to end-user app manuel and evaluations and are to be found in the project site)
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projet Traceur web site : presentation, evaluations, news...
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Docs: the Traceur doc is in the master branch ; the doc pulled from e-mission is in the e-mission-contrib branch, to be used when we want to contribute (PRs) to the e-mission docs
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Code : similarly there is a traceur FabMob master branch for e-mission-phone-fabmob and e-mission-server-fabmob, as for e-mission-translate, and an e-mission-contrib branch
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Issues : Specific issues of the Traceur FabMob project currently concern more the phone app. You can see how we are progressing by looking at the Traceur PROJECT
The e-mission-docs repo contains all the documentation for the project, except end-user documentation (which will be on the project web site) and almost ALL THE ISSUES.
There are some specialized READMEs in the individual repositories, but they are gradually being moved in here. This means that if you have any questions, you should first search here and if you don't find any existing issues, you should file an issue here.
E-mission is an open source mobility platform developed at the RISE and BETS labs in the UC Berkeley EECS Department.
E-mission includes a mobile application for Android and iOS, with user consent, automatically collects the user's travel patterns and sends them to the server so as to derive personal mobility information and analyses; depending on user consent for sharing his/her data, the data can also be used for aggregate mobility data studies. The application is also a tool for collecting information filled in by the user (such as incidents, ground truth information about his/her trip purpose and transportation mode, or answers to questions asked in external surveys).
The server is a python web application, the data is stored in a mongoDB database;
the client is a Cordova application for both Android and iOS.
The application has been initially designed to be reused in research and academic projects either for conducting and as a good learning project for CS students. It is also freely reusable for any other user cases (LINK to list to be added here).
Read these papers for understand the context of the e-mission research project and concrete material for understanding the software.
- TRB paper describing how to use e-mission functionality
- The in-review paper on the e-mission architecture, please do not distribute
The next features and enhancement can be guessed from the ISSUES
Project organisation and funding (to be completed)
The current are described in Develop/Future