Internet of Things (IoT) – A Simple Explanation
Who orders vegetables for your home?
You or your parents do that, right? But what if tomorrow, your refrigerator directly
orders for vegetables after analysing the shortage in stock? Yes, that is
possible with the emergence of a new concept called the Internet of Things
(IoT).
What
is the “Internet of Things (IoT)”?
Simplyput, this is the concept of basically connecting any device with an ON and OFFswitch to the Internet or to each other. This includes everything from cellphones, coffee makers, washing machines, headphones, lamps, wearable devices
and almost anything else you can think of.
Or, if you want us to make it more
simple – Internet of Things (IoT) is a concept where Things
can talk to other Things!
Internet
of Things – Example
Let’s
go back to my morning and there I am lying blissfully asleep or so it seems.
The sensors
in my arm sent something is very wrong my heart rate – it
is going up, my breathing has become erratic, and instead of this time gently
waking me, it vibrates aggressively to get my attention, and as I roll over, I
I’m grabbing my chest, and I’m I’m like what’s going on, so I reach over
to my phone.
I
pull it up and sure enough there’s a message it says I’m having high blood
pressure in my breathing as a radicand and it suggests that I take a two
aspirin right away and then goes on to say it says all my vital signs have been
recorded in electronically transmitted to my medical provider.
So back at the hospital the
doctors already evaluating my data and in his professional
opinion I need to get in the hospital right away so we electronically
dispatch Emergency Medical Team directly to my home
including pertinent data about my current medical situations so they know how
to take care of me and I even get a notice or a message from the EMT that
they’re about to arrive I’m whisking to the hospital and I’m put under keen observation.
The good news is later that morning
that doctor comes and says you’re going to be fine. You
were suffering a heart attack and we avoided any major
damage because you got the treatment you needed in just the nick of time so now
is the internet of things worth it maybe
all because things can talk to other things or
what we call the Internet of Things Thank you.
Note: This is an excerpt from the
speech by Benson Hougland at TEDxTemecula.
Who
coined the term the Internet of Things?
In
1999 Kevin Ashton, then at P&G (later MIT’s Auto-ID Center), coined the
term ‘Internet of Things’. It was a new term, but not a new operation. It was
known as pervasive computing, ubicomp, and ambient intelligence.
The
first version of the internet was about data created by the internet. The next
version is about the data created by things.
Which devices can be part of IoT?
Anything
that can be connected, will be connected.
Any
device, if it has an on and off switch then chances are it can be a part of the
IoT. Very often the connected devices will have an I.P address. With Internet
Protocol Version 6 (IPv6), assigning an IP address to billions of devices has
become very much feasible.
Examples
of ‘things’ which can be connected to internet include:
·
Connected Wearables – Smartwatches,
Smart glasses, fitness bands etc.
·
Connected Homes – connecting
household appliances to the network.
·
Connected Cars – vehicles that are
connected to the internet.
·
Connected Cities – smart meters which
analyse usage of water, gas, electricity etc connect cities to IoT
Operationally
this means that we can define the Internet of Things as the seamless flow
between the –
·
BAN (body area network): wearables,
·
LAN (local area network): smart
home,
·
WAN (wide area network): connected
car, and
·
VWAN (very wide area network): the
smart city.
Key
to this flow is having control of the data.
That
is why Google is offering a Glass and a Lens so you can synchronize your health
data into the NEST and the Google Car throughout the smart city applications of
google.org. The idea is that in consumer applications and services you never
have to leave the Google Cloud. The products are gateways linking up the
networks.
Why
would we want an Internet of Things?
We
want it because it can offer us –
·
the best possible feedback on
physical and mental health.
·
the best possible resource allocation
based on real-time monitoring.
·
best possible decision making on
mobility patterns.
·
the best possible alignments of local
providers with global potential.
IoT
– Opportunities and Benefits
IoT
offers us the opportunity to be more efficient in how we do things, saving us
time, money and often emissions in the process.
Internet
of Things can be used to tackle simpler day-to-day issues – like finding a car
parking space in busy areas, linking up your home entertainment system and
using your fridge webcam to check if you need more milk on the way home.
IoT offers
many other benefits industrially, such as:
·
Unprecedented
connectivity: IoT data
and insights from connected applications and devices empower organizations
with the ability to deliver innovative new products and services faster than
their competitors.
·
Increased
efficiency: IoT
networks of smart and intelligent devices provide real-time data to arm
employees with the information they need to optimize their day-to-day
efficiency and productivity.
·
Cost
savings: IoT devices provide accurate data
collection and automated workflows to help organizations reduce their operating
costs and minimize errors.
·
Time
savings: Connected smart devices can help
organizations enhance the performance of systems and processes to save time.
IoT
– Threats and Challenges
There
is a very clear danger that technology is running ahead of the game.
More
than 7 billion devices will need to be made secure by their manufacturers
before 2020.
The
need to secure every connected device by 2020 is “critical”.
IoT
botnets, created using a network of out-of-date devices took large
websites and services offline in 2016.
Everything
that’s connected to the internet can be hacked, IoT products are no exception
to this unwritten rule. (Remember the car hacking scene in the ‘Fate of the
Furious’ movie).
If every product becomes connected
then there’s the potential for unbridled observation of users. This will create
a lot of privacy issues.
In
the future, intelligence services might use the internet of things for
identification, surveillance, monitoring, location tracking, and targeting for
recruitment, or to gain access to networks or user credentials.
Summary
Simply,
the Internet of Things is made up of devices – from simple sensors to
smartphones and wearables – connected together.
IoT
is increasingly being used to define objects that “talk” to each other.
IoT
is a giant network of connected “things” (which also includes people).
The relationship will be between people-people, people-things, and
things-things.
Companies are using IoT, AI and machine learning to rapidly evolve in a way
we’ve never seen before
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