Mit media Lab Stefan Marti mit media Lab running head: Active Messenger



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tActive Messenger: Email Filtering and Delivery in a Heterogeneous Network

Chris Schmandt

MIT Media Lab

Stefan Marti

MIT Media Lab
RUNNING HEAD: Active Messenger

Corresponding Author’s Contact Information:

Chris Schmandt


MIT Media Lab, E15-368a
20 Ames Street
Cambridge MA, 02139, U.S.A.

Phone: (617) 253-5156


Email: geek@media.mit.edu.

Stefan Marti


MIT Media Lab, E15-384C
20 Ames Street
Cambridge MA, 02139, U.S.A.

Phone: (617) 253-8026


Email: stefanm@media.mit.edu.
Brief Authors’ Biographies:

Chris Schmandt is a computer scientist with an interest in mobile computing and mediated communication; he is the head of the Speech Interface Group at the MIT Media Lab. Stefan Marti is a research assistant with an interest in telecommunication intermediaries; he is a PhD candidate in the Speech Interface Group at the MIT Media Lab.
Abstract

Active Messenger (AM) is a software agent that dynamically filters and routes email to a variety of wired and wireless delivery channels, monitoring a message's progress through various channels over time. Its goal is to ensure that desired messages always reach the subscriber, while decreasing message volume when the user is less reachable through location awareness. AM acts as a proxy, hiding the identity of the multiple device addresses at which the subscriber may be found and caches channels to guarantee seamless information delivery in a heterogeneous network. Our previous experience with mobile messaging influenced the initial requirements and design of AM. We describe the operation and evolution of AM to meet changing user needs, and how our own communication patterns and expectations have changed as we relied increasingly on mobile delivery.



contents


1.Introduction

2.Origins of Active Messenger

2.1.Telephones

2.2.Filtering

2.3.Facsimile

2.4.Pagers/SMS

3.Active Messenger

3.1.AM architecture

3.2.Filtering and delivery

3.3.Device handoff and intermittent connectivity

3.4.Role as proxy mailer and PDA

3.5.Rules and User Interface

4.Evaluation and evolution

4.1.Being always connected

4.2.Reliability and redundancy

4.3.Message size and quantity

4.4.Parallel sending to equivalent channels

4.5.Impromptu uses and flexibility

4.6.Why a heterogeneous network?

5.Related work

6.Conclusions and future directions





  1. Introduction

Active Messenger (AM) is a system that prioritizes email messages and delivers them to a variety of devices in a heterogeneous network. Its goal is to ensure delivery of urgent messages across multiple user access methods, while throttling back delivery of less important messages in a location-sensitive manner. More than just a static message router, AM waits for an active user to read messages on screen, and may attempt to reach a series of devices over time, or to resend messages when a device comes back into range. AM uses sets of explicit and context-sensitive filtering rules, based on a user's recent correspondence, calendar, and location, and transcodes messages to fit different display characteristics of mobile text-based devices, as well as for faxing or speech synthesis for voice delivery.

AM is a two-way system, acting as a proxy for messages or replies from the mobile devices, rewriting them to appear to originate from the user's canonical email address. AM tracks message threads on a per-device basis, and can explain its behavior in handling a particular message. Short structured messages access and modify personal information, such as address book and calendar, and allow access to limited web-based sources.

We built AM because email is an essential communication channel for both of us, but we also need to work outside the office and need almost permanent access to our email. Our experiences are similar to the mobile professional workers studied by Perry, O'Hara, Sellen, Harper, & Brown (2001). This study found that remote awareness and access to colleagues was very important, but available intermittently via email (on laptops) or mobile phones. It was important for these workers to plan ahead so they had needed documents with them, and use dead time effectively. The phone was used in many ways as a "device proxy", to have helpers take dictation, and send email or faxes. AM applies mobile email technology to these problems, allowing closer team awareness through email notification, remote access to many desktop tools and means to obtain forgotten files. Since email is asynchronous, “down time” is excellent for sending from a mobile device.

Accepting mail from colleagues at any time allows the mobile user to be more aware of and active in decision making back at the office. But interruption has great cost. As O'Conaill and Frohlich (1995) found in an observational study, although the interrupted party benefited from the interruption, more than 40% of the time they did not resume the work they were doing prior to it. And as Cutrell, Czerwinski, and Horvitz (2001) found, even when an interruption is ignored, it impairs task performance. But as Hudson, Christensen, Kellogg, and Erickson (2002) point out, the availability problem is a complex tension between wanting to avoid interruption because of distraction from current workflow, and appreciating that at other times the interruption is beneficial.

Mobile email usage is growing fast. The makers of the Blackberry mobile email device have 1.1 million subscribers in the U.S., a number which may double this year (Brady, 2004). Globally, 45.6 billion SMS messages were sent from mobile phones since February 20041. If each message represents a potential interruption in one's pocket, a system such as AM must have means of filtering messages, possibly being context-aware. For managing messages, AM uses routing rules, a concept going back at least 15 years to the classic Information Lens work. As Mackay et al. (1989) found in a field study, Information Lens users had no trouble writing rules, but different users used rather different sets of filtering rules. Other work shows that email users have very different habits, as Whittaker and Sidner found (1996) in a study of mail folder use, a topic related to routing. Terveen and Murray (1996) offered some means to assist users writing rules for their agents; we, too use a rule-based approach with different means of assisting the rule-writing. An alternative to end-user programming via rules is to train an agent by example, as was done by Boone (1998); when routing is conditioned on status of various devices, user location and activity level, message sender, time of day, and media available, such training becomes awkward, although for simple configurations it may be easier on end users.

This paper describes the operation and evolution of Active Messenger as both a research project as well as a tool in daily use by the authors on all of their email for 5 years. We will go on, in section two, to discuss our own nearly 20 years of work in mobile email. From this, we draw in section three a set of design principles for AM, and describe its operation and evolution. Section four emphasizes lessons from actual use of AM for five years, section five presents related work, and in section six we generalize these experiences while discussing alternative architectures.




  1. Origins of Active Messenger

For twenty years, we have been exploring the delivery of mobile email via different media and technologies and to make “the desktop” available to mobile users. During this time we have never attempted to replace desktop (or laptop) computers, because large screens and full-sized keyboards are very well suited for text-based communication. Rather we have sought to enhance email’s utility by providing notification and access from locations or situations in which it would otherwise be unavailable. We built real systems with real, although highly sympathetic, users in a work environment that saw early adoption of intense email usage; if the system did not perform to the satisfaction of the users, they would not hesitated to abandon its usage. In using and improving these systems, we learned a lot which influenced the design of Active Messenger.

    1. Telephones

In the mid 1980’s we built early voice user interfaces for the telephone, and what has now become known as “unified messaging” in which all message media are available by either screen or telephone; this includes hearing email by text-to-speech synthesis (Schmandt & Arons, 1984). In the early 1990’s we combined listening to email with remote access to ordinary desktop computing tools. This led to Phoneshell (Schmandt, 1993), a telephone-based system using text-to-speech to read email and access an address book, calendar, laboratory-wide dial-by-name service, and news, weather, stock quotes, and traffic, in addition to the expected voice mail. Phoneshell was used extensively by a small audience at MIT and Sun Microsystems, where it was made to use Sun’s calendar management tools. Phoneshell has been continually operational since 1989, with a maximum of 10 users at any time, and three power users for over five years each.

Phoneshell users can initiate messages or compose responses (using the telephone keypad, two key presses per letter) and forward messages as well; replies come from the user’s ordinary email address. Initially, sending email from a phone was such a novelty that Phoneshell automatically added a footer about how the message had been composed. Over time, though, we found that we often did not want to reveal that we were not “hard at work in the office” and went to some pains to program Phoneshell to perform capitalization of the reply message so it looked normal. Although speech-based user interfaces were also built (Marx & Schmandt, 1996; Yankelovich, Levow, & Marx, 1995), it is the reliable and less resource intensive touch-tone Phoneshell that remains in use. In addition to being a platform for voice user interface experimentation, Phoneshell evolved in two directions.



    1. Filtering

Listening to messages is slow, so Phoneshell users constructed static procmail-like rules2 to sort messages into categories; within each category messages were presented in first-in first-out order. As daily mail volume increased steadily during the 1990s, filtering became even more essential. These rules adequately capture static or slowly varying information, such as family and co-workers, but very mobile users benefit from more dynamic contextual information.

The CLUES filtering agent (Marx & Schmandt, 1996) was built in the mid 1990’s to meet this need. On an hourly basis, CLUES creates a set of rules to specify “timely” messages, by consulting the user's log of sent email, dialed phone calls (if using computer telephony tools), calendar, and address book. For example, messages containing the word “Ubicomp” within a few days of a calendar entry such as “Ubicomp paper due” will be tagged as timely, as would a reply message from a co-author if the user had sent him a message yesterday. If a traveler provides a contact phone number, or just an area code, via calendar, CLUES associates emails with location via the address book, and marks as “timely” messages from senders in that region. Because Phoneshell supports dialing by name, our home-built voice mail system logs caller ID, and the address book maps email addresses to phone numbers, CLUES is also able to detect communication threads that pass between voice and text messaging.

Although simple, CLUES is effective. In a simple example, author A was able to respond to email from a major sponsor in the Bay Area with “are you free for lunch in 15 minutes?”; the sponsor accepted and was please by the prompt response. AM knew its user was in the Bay Area (from his calendar) and used his address book to find the email sender’s telephone number, which matched that location. A more sophisticated example came on the same trip when AM delivered a message about “A/V requests for your talk tomorrow” from an otherwise unknown person at PARC. AM did not know that person, but her email address looked similar to several other entries in the address book, all with Bay Area phone numbers.


    1. Facsimile

Almost from the beginning, Phoneshell faced the dilemma of polling versus asynchronous delivery. Although it worked from any telephone in the world (we carried pocket touch tone generators to Europe), the user was required to place a call to find out if there was mail waiting. The first work around to this problem involved faxing, which gradually became an alternate delivery mechanism. Some users configured automatic faxing of summaries of new emails, the day’s calendar and weather forecasts, and news summaries to their homes or, when on the road, hotels; this allowed a morning “catch up” without having to place any call. Faxing provided notification, but without mobility. Faxing became an option to most Phoneshell commands; this was useful for sharing information or reading long messages. For example, when one of us was to be joined by family mid-way through a trip some time zones away, he alerted them to unusually cold weather by having Phoneshell fax home a forecast in the middle of the night.

    1. Pagers/SMS

Asynchronous textual notification was partly solved in the late 1990’s with the appearance of the first alphanumeric pagers with email gateways. Early pagers were receive-only with only regional coverage, but became popular immediately; notification of new messages increased the recipient’s responsiveness dramatically. When email arrived at the computer, a copy was forwarded to an agent that executed a procmail rule set (updated every hour by CLUES), to decide whether to forward to the pager. Phoneshell also allowed control over paging, as pagers were very regional at the time. When author A had one pager for the Bay Area and one for Boston, switching was added to Phoneshell, and this was the first motivation for AM.

By shortly thereafter we had a plethora of paging devices, each with different coverage and usage charges, and soon some pagers were two-way. At the same time GSM mobile phones with SMS (Short Message Service) became available in the U.S., providing similar text messaging. While on campus, many messages were sent through Canard (Chesnais, 1997), a system using Motorola equipment and a roof-top transmitter; while at work it was desirable to be reachable. Off campus options depended on where one lived. We soon had multiple procmail rule sets for each device and would manually switch them, either from a pager or over Phoneshell, when leaving and returning to work; of course the problem was remembering to do so. We also missed the calendar and address book access provided by Phoneshell, and so provided this using structured messages. For example, the sending the message rolo Curly Howard would return Curly’s address book to the pager, and cal tomorrow would page with tomorrow’s calendar entries; these were implemented in a utility called Knothole3.



The multiplicity of devices, different forwarding rules depending on the device, and change of access modality during the day and the week led to Active Messenger. AM was designed to automate distribution of messages to various devices in an extensible manner, while allowing the widest range of devices possible, including pagers, phone, and fax. AM was required to be always running, monitoring message access and wireless device availability, with caching and retransmission as necessary. This is much more complex than Phoneshell, which merely had to parse the mail spool file once per call to determine which messages were new at that time.


  1. Active Messenger

By the time we built Active Messenger, we had seven years’ of operational experience with mobile messaging via Phoneshell, and more than a year of experimenting with email on pagers, with half a dozen users at a time on each system. Author A and several other users traveled extensively and used these techniques as their sole access to email (this was before the days of the web, cyber-cafes, and WiFi hot spots). Based on this experience, and the needs of and the feedback from these users, we identified a number of design principles which AM had to support:


  1. Filtering of messages to the mobile device is essential. Interruption in one’s pocket with every email is unthinkable. AM uses CLUES and a blacklist.

  2. There is no point reading email if you cannot reply to it, this is only frustrating.

  3. Device addresses are private; email addresses are public. In trade for always being connected, users need absolute control over privacy. AM acts as a proxy, hiding device addresses in all correspondence.

  4. Remote access to desktop utilities such as calendar is useful. This allows these databases to be maintained on a computer with a good user interface, and supports sharing. AM supports access through structured email messages.

  5. It is hard to remember long email addresses and awkward to enter them on handheld devices. AM uses address books and mail alias files to allow sending messages without recalling the full address of correspondents.

  6. Real computers” are always preferable for reading email when at hand. Pagers, PDAs, and phones are simply too small with poor text input. AM waits to deliver mail to a device if a user may read it on screen.

  7. Users forget to activate modes. We forget to put our phone into vibration mode until it rings; AM determines device modality from ordinary use.

  8. Forwarding, reply to sender, and reply to all recipients are essential. Though simple commands, these are powerful actions in email communication.

  9. Reliability is crucial. Mobile users cannot check the status of running processes. This affects mainly the software architecture of AM.

  10. Command syntax and user interfaces must be simple. Mobile users are distracted and busy. AM tries to “keep it simple.”




    1. AM architecture

Active Messenger was meant to co-exist with Phoneshell as a separate, parallel delivery mechanism; reliability was extremely important in Phoneshell and AM development should not impact that. AM is implemented as two large PERL scripts: the main AM server that runs continuously, and an event driven process that executes when a new message arrives. The event driven process analyzes each message and extracts the user’s commands, if any. Such embedded commands trigger subroutines that get information from the web (e.g., weather forecasts), local resources (e.g., dictionary lookup), or from the user’s personal information (e.g., her calendar, rolodex, etc.), and sends it back. For ordinary incoming email, this process uses CLUES to determine its priority, and unless it is to be ignored, creates a new database entry for the message; it does not immediately forward it. This process also tracks message threads and monitors device activity.

The AM server tracks each message: when it arrived, when it was sent to which device, an estimate if the user read the message, etc. The server periodically parses the user’s mail spool file and extracts the status of each message; it also parses several web pages to assess the status of external systems, mapping the information provided to its internal message table. It also tries to determine the user’s location by using “finger” information from the most commonly used mail servers, as well as caller ID from Phoneshell. In separate data structures, it also keeps track of when the last message was sent to a device, when the user replied using this device, as well as other parameters that allow it to assess the user’s activities in order to send or resend a specific message at the best time to the most appropriate channel.

AM is thus invoked with the arrival of each email (with consideration of race conditions if many message arrive), and knows that a message was received on a device when it receives any other message from that device (device radios are less powerful than cell base stations, so this a safe assumption). It determines whether a user has read a message on screen by examining the user’s mailbox and parsing its messages (or via IMAP). Relying on principle 6, AM never deletes or modifies the mailbox; we assume that users do maintenance on a real screen. Once a message is known to have been read, AM is finished with delivery, although it may be called upon to access the message in formatting any reply from the user.


    1. Filtering and delivery

AM relies on several sources to classify messages. Users specify rules linking particular kinds of messages to user-defined categories, using a modified version of the public domain procmail syntax of Unix regular expressions. For example, messages from a daughter or boss may be “very important,” messages to a mailing list may be “ignore,” and messages from students may be “important.” AM also uses CLUES to detect “timely” messages. Users indicate the ordering of message priorities, including ordering of the “timely” category. A message is evaluated for timeliness when it arrives, and is assigned to the highest matching priority. If a rule identifies messages from a boss as “very important” and this category is ranked higher than timeliness, a message from a boss about something in tomorrow’s calendar is “very important,” not “timely.”

AM uses the user-defined ordering to determine how hard to attempt to deliver a message. In addition to specifying filter categories and ordering them, the user must indicate which categories should be sent to which devices; this is defined by a text configuration file. Combined with geographic or situational (when a device is active) locality, this mapping allows AM to throttle message delivery when a user is in a less accessible mode. Users also specify how long to wait for a response at each step.

When a user is known to be online and active, there is no immediate reason to deliver any messages as reading on a big screen is preferred, so AM simply observes the progress of the message through whatever mail reader the user employs. If an important message remains unread for some time, it is then forwarded. Since Canard worked only within a few kilometers of campus, and author A lives out of that range, it was safe to assume that he was “at work” when in range, and a large number of messages were sent to that device. When further away and using a more expensive service (such as Skytel or Iridium) he limited his messages to only the highest priorities. In this way, AM strives to guarantee prompt delivery of very important messages but pace delivery of other messages to limit their degree of annoyance.

AM takes a number of timed steps after a message arrives and is sorted. The following example (Figure 1) shows what happens when a new email message arrives at a user’s inbox—let’s call her Clara. Clara has the following lines in her preference file:

Mapping
important = canard(20)
very important = canard(20), phone(14), fax(35)

This describes the channel sequences for important and very important messages. If a message is “important”, it will be sent to the Canard pager. However, if the message is “very important”, it gets sent to a phone, and then to a fax, after Canard. The bracketed numbers specify delay in minutes until a device or channel is used. Let’s assume furthermore that Clara is currently at home and has the following entries in her preference file. She has the channels



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