The Internet of Things

June 3, 2013

Posted by  in Current NewsTechnologyI think there might be as many different predictions about the Internet of Things as there are bloggers and pundits. So I thought I would join the fray and give my take as well. The Internet of Things is that it is going to involve a new set of technologies that will enable us to get feedback from our local environment. That is going to allow for the introduction of a new set of tools and toys, some frivolous and some revolutionary.

I have read scores of articles talking about how this is going to change daily life for households. The day may come when our households resemble the Jetsons and where we have robots with more common sense than most of us running our households, but we are many years away from that.

There will be lots of new toys and gadgets that will sometimes make our daily lives easier. For instance food we buy may have little sensors put into packaging that will tell you when your produce is getting ready to go bad so that you won’t forget to eat it. There will be better robots that can vacuum the floors and maybe even do laundry and walk the dog. But I don’t see these as revolutionary and probably not affordable for the general populace for some time. For a long time the Internet of Things is going to create toys that wealthy people or tech geeks will play with, and it will take years to get these technologies to make it into everybody’s homes. Very little of what I have been reading for household use sounds revolutionary.

The biggest revolutionary change that will directly affect the average person is medical monitoring. Within a decade or two it will be routine to have sensors always tracking your vitals so that they will know there is something wrong with you before you do. There will be little sensors in your bloodstream looking for things like cancer cells, which is going to mean that we won’t have to worry about curing cancer, we’ll head it off before it gets started. This will revolutionize healthcare to be proactive and preventative and will eventually be affordable to all.

English: A technology roadmap of the Internet ...

English: A technology roadmap of the Internet of Things. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

English: A technology roadmap of the Internet of Things. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

I think the most immediate big benefactor of the Internet of Things is going to be at the industrial level. For instance, it is not hard to envision soil sensors that will tell the farmer the conditions of each part of his fields so that his smart tractor can fertilize or weed each section only as appropriate. There is already work going on to produce mini-sensors that can be sent underground into oil fields to give oil geologists the most accurate picture they have ever had of the underground topology. This will make it possible to extract a lot more oil and to do so more efficiently.

Small sensors will also make it a lot easier to manufacturer complex objects or complicated molecules. This could lead to the production of new polymers and materials that will be cheaper stronger and biodegradable. It will mean that medicines can be modified to interact with your specific DNA to avoid side effects. It means 3D printing that will feel like Star Trek replicators that will be able to combine complex molecules to make food and other objects.NASA has already undertaken a project to be able to print pizza as the first step towards being able to print food in space to enable long flights to Mars.

And a lot of what the Internet of Things might mean is a bit scary. Some high-end department stores already track customers with active cell phones to see exactly how they shop. But this is going to get far more personal and with face recognition software stores are going to know everything about how you shop. They will not just know what you buy, but what you looked atand thought about buying. And they will offer you instant on-site specials to get you to buy – ads that are aimed just at you, right where you are standing.

I remember reading a science fiction book once where the ads on the street changed for each person who walked by, and we are not that far away from that reality. There are already billboards in Japan that look at the demographics in front of them and which change the ads appropriately. Add facial recognition into that equation and they will move beyond showing ads aimed at middle-aged men and instead show an ad aimed directly at you. The Internet of Things is going to create a whole new set of attacks on privacy and as a society we will need to develop strategies and policies to protect ourselves against the onslaught of billions of sensors.

Probably one of the biggest uses of new sensors will be in energy management. And this will be done on the demand end rather than the supply end. Today we all have devices that use electricity continuously even when we aren’t using them. It may not seem like a lot of power to have lights on in an empty room or to have the water warm all of the time in an automatic coffee pot, but multiply these energy uses by millions and billions and it adds up to a lot of wasted power. You read today about the smart grid, which is an effort to be more efficient with electricity mostly on the demand side. But the real efficiencies will be gained when the devices in our life can act independently to minimize power usage.

Sensor technologies will be the heart of the Internet of Things and will be able to work on tasks that nobody wants to do. For instance, small nanobots that can metabolize or bind oil could be dispatched to an oil spill to quickly minimize environmental damage. The thousands of toxic waste dumps we have created on the planet can be restored by nanobots. Harvardhas been working on developing a robot bee and it is not hard to envision little flying robots that could be monitoring and protecting endangered species in the wild. We will eventually use these technologies to eat the excess carbon dioxide in our atmosphere and to terraform Mars with an oxygen atmosphere and water.

Many of the technologies involved will be revolutionary and they will spark new debates in areas like privacy and data security. Mistakes will be made and there will be horror stories of little sensors gone awry. Some of the security monitoring will be put to bad uses by repressive regimes. But the positive things that can come out of the Internet of Things make me very excited about the next few decades.

Of course there will be a lot of bandwidth needed. The amount of raw data we will be gathering will be swamp current bandwidth needs. We are going to need bandwidth everywhere from the City to the factory to the farm, and areas without bandwidth are going to be locked out of a lot more than just not being able to stream NetFlix. The kind of bandwidth we are going to need is going to require fiber and we need to keep pushing fiber out to where people play and work.

Posted by  in Current NewsTechnology


Connecting the world a Microsoft documentary

February 14, 2013

This video documentary by Microsoft explores how digital and specifically, Interaction Design, is and will change our lives in an ever connect world. It’s 18 minutes long but well worth a watch. I thought I’d paraphrase a few of the most thought provoking comments from the documentary below:

“‘Without humans there’s nothing interesting to talk about.”

“We are in the phase where we are a little confused about what’s important in life.”

“It’s about understanding that ecosystem where the human is at the centre.”

“It’s about getting more of the physical world connected with the digital world.”

“What we design as a man-made object is only complete when there are people using it”


8 Insights About The Coming Era Of Interactive Design

January 15, 2013

Connecting is a short documentary by Bassett & Partners and Microsoft that explores how our lives (and our gadgets) have and will change in a more connected world. It’s 18 minutes long but very worth the time, as it features interviews with designers from Method, Twitter, Arduino, Frog, Stamen, Microsoft, and Nokia. What’s crazy, even with the magic of editing, is that so many of these talented perspectives tend to finish one another’s sentences.

As you watch, you’ll see a general consensus on a few really important points. They’d make a decent poster:

  1. Our phones demand too much attention, detracting from our real experiences.
  2. Analog metaphors are making less sense on digital devices.
  3. We’re waiting for new paradigms in experiencing media like text on screens.
  4. UX is a living, somewhat unpredictable thing. All experiences need to be fluid and flexible now.
  5. You shouldn’t just try to understand a product. You should try to understand its connected network.
  6. An “Internet of things”–countless connected sensors–is coming (and here).
  7. All of our information feeds into something larger than ourselves, a “superorganism” or “colony” of digital information.
  8. The hive mind got so big that greater Internet thought is now manifesting locally (think Egypt’s uprising or Occupy Wall Street).

http://www.fastcodesign.com/1671611/8-insights-about-the-coming-era-of-interactive-design


Cloud Computing is one of the Top 10 Strategic Technologies for 2012

November 10, 2011

As every year, Gartner identifies the 10 technologies that will be strategic for most organizations all through next year. And of course, cloud computing is among them.

For Gartner, the technologies appearing in the report have potential enough to significantly impact during the next 3 years, whether in business or IT department, as well as receive an important volume of investment or mean a risk in case organizations do not implement them in time. A strategic technology can already exist or be mature and/or become suitable enough for a wide range of uses. It can be also an emerging technology that offers an opportunity for strategic business advantages for early adopters or with potential for significant market disruption within the next five years. These technologies represent an impact on the organizations long-term plans, programs and initiatives. In short, these technologies will be strategic for most organizations and, as such, they should be included in planning for IT leaders.

Let’s see what Gartner says about Cloud computing technologies:

The cloud is a disruptive force and has potential to generate a long-term impact in most industries. While market remains in its early stages in 2011 and 2012, it is expected that all suppliers of large companies offer the possibility to build cloud environments and also services in the cloud.

Companies are already implementing private and hybrid cloud environments to bring together capabilities such as securing, managing and governing all business requirements.

Furthermore, form security point of view, companies are already working to solve this critical point. For Gartner, the challenge of private clouds is to lead the operations and development groups closer among each other in order to approach the speed and efficiency of public providers of cloud services.

 

As an anecdote, we’ve also deemed important to refer to other technologies covered in the report:

Mobile Devices platform: A unique platform leave us in a both B2E and B2C environment, and IT managers will have to face that.

Applications for mobile devices, changing interfaces: The emphasis on touch, gestures, search, voice and video, will change the way we design user interfaces.

User experience: The quality of interaction with the end user or an object will improve knowing computer context built with information obtained through activities, connections and user preferences; and this all, in order to anticipate to users needs.

Internet of Things: The Internet is reaching objects thanks to the inclusion in them of devices connected to Internet focused in technologies for identifying, sensing and communicating.

Apps stores: Gartner predicts billions of downloads per year. This will grow from a consumer-only phenomenon to an enterprise focus creating the Enterprise app stores.

Next generation Google Analytics: Analytics will mature from structured and simple data analyzed by individuals to analysis of complex information of many types (text, video, etc…) The new step is to provide simulation, prediction, optimization and other analytics, that goes beyond information.

Big Data. The size, complexity of formats and speed of delivery exceeds the capabilities of traditional data management technologies, a fact that underscores the emergence of new technologies to solve it.

In-Memory Computing. Gartner emphasizes that there is an excessive use of flash in consumer devices. Large volumes of information are a reality for any department of Business Intelligence, and the increasingly advanced use of large databases in business, the operating speed is a key concern: in-memory computing could be the answer who was looking for.

Low-power servers. The potential advantage is the reduction of consumption but have to avoid or minimize intensive tasks and redirect workloads to a website.

Anticipating to what will happen seems interesting, doesn’t it? If you want learn more, we invite you to read the whole article, as always.

Thanks to http://blog.eyeos.org/en/2011/10/26/cloud-computing-is-one-of-the-top-10-strategic-technologies-for-2012/

 


The Internet of things

March 8, 2011

Meet the Internet

Image by Profound Whatever via Flickr

C24 has seen a significant increase in the amount of requests for hosting  over the last 6 months as organisations see the true value of having their applications delivered from hosting centres. As you may know C24 are specialists in delivering business applications; especially around the Microsoft stack, from one of the most secure UK data centres. When looking at the growth trajectory it is always interesting to see visions on how the world may look in only a few years. Below is a very interesting video that touches on ‘the internet of things‘. Apparently this year the amount of devices connected to the internet will pass 5 billion and by 2020 predictions are around 22 billion. This will mean that devices will be communicating with each other as well as to human beings. Please enjoy the video below from IBM and if you wish to talk to someone from C24 about how we can work with your organisation to deliver really change please just call us:


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