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- Internet_of_Things abstract "The Internet of Things (IoT) refers to uniquely identifiable objects and their virtual representations in an Internet-like structure. The term Internet of Things was proposed by Kevin Ashton in 1999 though the concept has been discussed since at least 1991. The concept of the Internet of Things first became popular through the Auto-ID Center at MIT and related market analysis publications. Radio-frequency identification (RFID) was seen as a prerequisite for the Internet of Things in the early days. If all objects and people in daily life were equipped with identifiers, they could be managed and inventoried by computers. Besides using RFID, the tagging of things may be achieved through such technologies as near field communication, barcodes, QR codes and digital watermarking.Equipping all objects in the world with minuscule identifying devices or machine-readable identifiers could transform daily life. For instance, business may no longer run out of stock or generate waste products, as involved parties would know which products are required and consumed. A person's ability to interact with objects could be altered remotely based on immediate or present needs, in accordance with existing end-user agreements. For example, such technology could enable much more powerful control of content creators and owners over their creations by better applying copyright restrictions and digital restrictions management, so a customer buying a Blu-ray disc containing a movie could choose to pay a high price and be able to watch the movie for a whole year, pay a moderate price and have the right to watch the movie for a week, or pay a low fee everytime she or he watches the movie.Today however, the term Internet of Things (commonly abbreviated as IoT) is used to denote advanced connectivity of devices, systems and services that goes beyond the traditional M2M and covers a variety of protocols, domains and applications.According to Gartner, there will be nearly 26 billion devices on the Internet of Things by 2020. According to ABI Research, more than 30 billion devices will be wirelessly connected to the Internet of Things (Internet of Everything) by 2020. Cisco created a dynamic "connections counter" to track the estimated number of connected things from July 2013 until July 2020 (methodology included). This concept, where devices connect to the internet/web via low-power radio, is the most active research area in IoT. The low-power radios do not need to use Wi-Fi or Bluetooth. Lower-power and lower-cost alternatives are being explored under the category of Chirp Networks.".
- Internet_of_Things wikiPageExternalLink internet-of-things.
- Internet_of_Things wikiPageExternalLink page.html.
- Internet_of_Things wikiPageExternalLink AUTOIDLABS-WP-BIZAPP-53.pdf.
- Internet_of_Things wikiPageExternalLink Internet-of-Things-Vision-Future2013.pdf.
- Internet_of_Things wikiPageExternalLink disruptive.pdf.
- Internet_of_Things wikiPageExternalLink wiki.
- Internet_of_Things wikiPageExternalLink documents.htm.
- Internet_of_Things wikiPageExternalLink index.html.
- Internet_of_Things wikiPageExternalLink Internet-of-Things_in_2020_EC-EPoSS_Workshop_Report_2008_v3.pdf.
- Internet_of_Things wikiPageExternalLink extensions.
- Internet_of_Things wikiPageExternalLink internet-of-things.
- Internet_of_Things wikiPageExternalLink rethinking-internet-things.
- Internet_of_Things wikiPageExternalLink showProductDetailPage.html?product=CMYIOT736.
- Internet_of_Things wikiPageID "12057519".
- Internet_of_Things wikiPageRevisionID "606798181".
- Internet_of_Things hasPhotoCollection Internet_of_Things.
- Internet_of_Things sign "Kevin Ashton".
- Internet_of_Things source "--07-22".
- Internet_of_Things text "Today computers—and, therefore, the Internet—are almost wholly dependent on human beings for information. Nearly all of the roughly 50 petabytes of data available on the Internet were first captured and created by human beings—by typing, pressing a record button, taking a digital picture, or scanning a bar code. Conventional diagrams of the Internet ... leave out the most numerous and important routers of all - people. The problem is, people have limited time, attention and accuracy—all of which means they are not very good at capturing data about things in the real world. And that's a big deal. We're physical, and so is our environment ... You can't eat bits, burn them to stay warm or put them in your gas tank. Ideas and information are important, but things matter much more. Yet today's information technology is so dependent on data originated by people that our computers know more about ideas than things. If we had computers that knew everything there was to know about things—using data they gathered without any help from us—we would be able to track and count everything, and greatly reduce waste, loss and cost. We would know when things needed replacing, repairing or recalling, and whether they were fresh or past their best. The Internet of Things has the potential to change the world, just as the Internet did. Maybe even more so.".
- Internet_of_Things subject Category:Ambient_intelligence.
- Internet_of_Things subject Category:Buzzwords.
- Internet_of_Things subject Category:Emerging_technologies.
- Internet_of_Things subject Category:Internet_of_Things.
- Internet_of_Things comment "The Internet of Things (IoT) refers to uniquely identifiable objects and their virtual representations in an Internet-like structure. The term Internet of Things was proposed by Kevin Ashton in 1999 though the concept has been discussed since at least 1991. The concept of the Internet of Things first became popular through the Auto-ID Center at MIT and related market analysis publications.".
- Internet_of_Things label "Internet das Coisas".
- Internet_of_Things label "Internet de las cosas".
- Internet_of_Things label "Internet delle cose".
- Internet_of_Things label "Internet der Dinge".
- Internet_of_Things label "Internet der dingen".
- Internet_of_Things label "Internet des objets".
- Internet_of_Things label "Internet of Things".
- Internet_of_Things label "Internet przedmiotów".
- Internet_of_Things label "Интернет вещей".
- Internet_of_Things label "إنترنت الأشياء".
- Internet_of_Things label "モノのインターネット".
- Internet_of_Things label "物联网".
- Internet_of_Things sameAs Internet_věcí.
- Internet_of_Things sameAs Internet_der_Dinge.
- Internet_of_Things sameAs Internet_de_las_cosas.
- Internet_of_Things sameAs Internet_des_objets.
- Internet_of_Things sameAs Internet_of_Things.
- Internet_of_Things sameAs Internet_delle_cose.
- Internet_of_Things sameAs モノのインターネット.
- Internet_of_Things sameAs 사물인터넷.
- Internet_of_Things sameAs Internet_der_dingen.
- Internet_of_Things sameAs Internet_przedmiotów.
- Internet_of_Things sameAs Internet_das_Coisas.
- Internet_of_Things sameAs m.02vnd10.
- Internet_of_Things sameAs Q251212.
- Internet_of_Things sameAs Q251212.
- Internet_of_Things wasDerivedFrom Internet_of_Things?oldid=606798181.
- Internet_of_Things isPrimaryTopicOf Internet_of_Things.