Yeah ..so you are right , We have over lived the "SMART" word now the new word toy we have now is "IoT" and today we are here to discuss the BIG Future of IoT . IoT what exactly is this ? , How is going to change our life , which industries will get affected first , top 10 cities of the world which are leading the IoT innovations and IoT events in India.
The Internet of Things (Iota) is system of interrelated computing
devices, mechanical and digital machines, objects, animals or people that are
provided with the network of physical objects
like devices, vehicles, buildings and other items—embedded with electronics,
software, sensors, and network connectivity that enables these objects to
collect and exchange data.
The Internet of Things will
revolutionize life. It has redefined business and affected every industry
starting from essential industries like healthcare to entertainment industries
like media. It is dramatically altering different industries especially the
ones which affect our GDP. IOT is
transforming interaction between Machine to human and Machine to Machine,
Machine to Infrastructure and Machine to Environment.
With the advancement of technology
IOT will bring ample opportunities along with new threats to both society and
business. It will allow us to control the physical entities like machines,
factories etc. directly through internet affecting their value chains, business
models, workforce and other necessary parts.
The key opportunities will be the
highly improved and optimized operational efficiency through predictive
maintenance and remote management, with advancement of technology, software
driven services, innovation in hardware and software, and the increased
visibility in products, processes, customers and partners. New
connected ecosystems,
coalescing around software
platforms that blur traditional industry boundaries and the
collaboration between human and machine will result in high productivity and
more engaging work experience.
With IOT, business will shift from products to outcome
based services, where measurable results will be delivered.
Such
outcomes may range from guaranteed machine uptimes on factory floors, to actual
amounts of energy savings in commercial buildings, to guaranteed crop yields
from a specific parcel of farmland. Delivering such outcomes will require new
levels of collaboration across an ecosystem of business partners, bringing
together players that combine their products and services to meet customer
needs. Software platforms will emerge that will better facilitate data capture,
aggregation and exchange across the ecosystem. They will help create,
distribute and monetize new products and services at unprecedented speed and
scale. The big winners will be platform owners and partners who can harness the
network effect inherent in these new digital business models to create new
kinds of value.
While
lower-skilled jobs, whether physical or cognitive, will be increasingly
replaced by machines over time, the Industrial Internet will also create new,
high skilled jobs that did not exist before, such as medical robot designers
and grid optimization engineers. Companies will also use Industrial Internet
technologies to augment workers, making their jobs safer and more productive,
flexible and engaging. As these trends take hold, and new skills are required,
people will increasingly rely upon smart machines for job training and skills
development.
As global
chatter grows around the Internet of Things (IoT), businesses in India already
are taking the plunge or planning to adopt the emerging technology. Businesses
in Indian markets led its global peers, with 75 percent already tapping or had
plans to deploy IoT applications and another 20 percent expressing interesting
in doing likewise. In comparison, 52 percent of respondents in Latin America
had deployed or were planning to deploy IoT, while 32 percent were keen to do
so, revealed a Forrester study.
With
customer relationships increasingly digital, organisations across all industry
segments were looking to transform their business to support this trend. Across
the globe, 19 percent said they were already using IoT products and services,
while 31 percent expressed interest in doing so.
It’s a mammoth opportunity for the world, as much as it is
for India. In five years, the global opportunity is likely to touch 300 billion USD and in comparison,
India too would boast of a 15 billion USD
market in IoT. It needs fostering with utmost care.
IOT helps in improving
efficiency, accuracy and economic benefit by allowing objects to be sensed and
controlled remotely across existing network infrastructure, creating
opportunities for more direct integration of the physical world into
computer-based systems, and resulting when IoT is augmented with sensors and
actuators, the technology becomes an instance of the more general class of
cyber-physical systems, which also encompasses technologies such as smart
grids, smart homes, intelligent transportation and smart cities. Each thing is
uniquely identifiable through its embedded computing system but is able to
interoperate within the existing Internet infrastructure. Experts estimate that
the IoT will consist of almost 50 billion objects by 2020.
1.) Sensors & Sensor technology
– They will sniff a wide variety of information ranging from Location,
Weather/Environment conditions, Grid parameters, Movement on assembly lines,
Jet engine maintenance data to Health essentials of a patient
2.) IoT Gateways – IoT Gateways, as the name rightly suggests, are the
gateways to internet for all the things/devices that we want to interact with.
Gateways help to bridge the internal network of sensor nodes with the external
Internet or World Wide Web. They do this by collecting the data from sensor
nodes & transmitting it to the internet infrastructure.
3.) Cloud/server infrastructure & Big Data
– The data transmitted through gateway is stored & processed securely
within the cloud infrastructure using Big Data analytics engine. This processed
data is then used to perform intelligent actions that make all our devices
‘Smart Devices’!
4.) End-user Mobile apps – The
intuitive mobile apps will help end users to control & monitor their
devices (ranging from room thermostat to jet engines & assembly lines) from
remote locations. These apps push the important information on your hand-held
devices & help to send commands to your Smart Devices!
5.) IPv6 – IP addresses are the
backbone to the entire IoT ecosystem. Internet is concerned about IP addresses
only & not if you are a human or a toaster. With Ipv4 we were running out
of IP addresses, but with Ipv6 (launched in 2012) we now have 3.4*10^38 IP
addresses!
1. The
sensor will be integrated with the gateway. Gateway helps to connect the sensor
network (things) to the Internet through Cloud infrastructure.
2.
Cloud/server possesses the detailed records about the each and every device
connected to it – device id, current status of the device, who has accessed the
device last time, how many times the device has been accessed and more.
3.
Connection with the cloud is implemented using web services such as RESTful.
4. End-users
interact with Cloud (and in turn devices installed in our homes) through the
mobile app. Request will be sent to the cloud with the authentication and
device information. Authentication is configured to ensure cyber security.
5. Cloud
will identify the device with the help of the device id and will send the
corresponding request to the appropriate sensor network using gateways.
6. Then, the
sensor will read the current temperature in the room and will send the response
back to the cloud.
7. Cloud
will identify the particular user who has requested the data and push the
requested data to the app. So user will get the current information directly on
his screen.
HISTORY
The concept
of a network of smart devices was discussed as early as 1982, with a modified
Coke machine at Carnegie Mellon University becoming the first
internet-connected appliance able to report its inventory and whether newly
loaded drinks were cold.
The concept
of the Internet of Things first became popular in 1999, through the Auto-ID
Centre at MIT and related market-analysis publications. Radio-frequency
identification (RFID) was seen by Kevin Ashton (one of the founders of the
original Auto-ID Centre) as a prerequisite for the Internet of Things at that
point. If all objects and people in daily life were equipped with
identifiers, computers could manage and inventory them. Besides
using RFID, the tagging of things may be achieved through such
technologies as near field communication, barcodes, QR codes and digital
watermarking.
Industries affected by IOT
·
Media
·
Environmental
monitoring
·
Infrastructure
management
·
Manufacturing
·
Energy
management
·
Medical and
healthcare system
·
Building and
home automation
·
Transportation
·
Agricultural
·
Education
·
Food
Media
The bulk of IoT activity in this
industry involved the use of apps on smartphones, tablets or other digital
devices. The industry appears to be moving away from the traditional
approach of using specific media environments such as newspapers, magazines, or
television shows and instead tap into consumers with technologies that reach
targeted people at optimal times in optimal locations. The ultimate aim is of
course to serve, or convey, a message or content that is (statistically
speaking) in line with the consumer’s mind-set
Environmental Monitoring
It utilize sensors to assist in environmental
protection by monitoring air or water quality, atmospheric or soil conditions,
and can even include areas like monitoring the movements of wildlife and their
habitats.
In environmental monitoring, WAVIoT-connected
sensors can aid in measuring emissions from factories, detect forest fires or
measure the level and quality of river water.
Development of resource constrained devices
connected to the Internet also means that other applications like earthquake or
tsunami early-warning systems can also be used by emergency services to provide
more effective aid. WAVIoT-based devices in this application typically span a
large geographic area and can also be mobile.
Infrastructure management
Monitoring and controlling operations of urban and rural infrastructures like bridges, railway tracks, on- and
offshore- wind-farms is a key application of the IoT. The IoT infrastructure
can be used for monitoring any events or changes in structural conditions that
can compromise safety and increase risk. It can also be used for scheduling
repair and maintenance activities in an efficient manner, by coordinating tasks
between different service providers and users of these facilities. IoT devices
can also be used to control critical infrastructure like bridges to provide
access to ships. Usage of IoT devices for monitoring and operating
infrastructure is likely to improve incident management and emergency response
coordination, and quality of service, up-times and reduce costs of operation in
all infrastructure related areas. Even areas such as waste management can
benefit from automation and optimization that could be brought in by the IoT.
Manufacturing
Network
control and management of manufacturing
equipment, asset and situation management, or manufacturing process control bring the IoT within the realm on industrial
applications and smart manufacturing as well. The IoT intelligent systems
enable rapid manufacturing of new products, dynamic response to product
demands, and real-time optimization of manufacturing production and supply chain
networks, by networking machinery,
sensors and control systems together.
Digital control systems to automate process controls, operator tools
and service information systems to optimize plant safety and security are
within the purview of the IoT. But it also extends itself to asset management
via predictive
maintenance, statistical evaluation, and
measurements to maximize reliability. Smart
industrial management systems can also be integrated with the Smart Grid, thereby enabling
real-time energy optimization. Measurements, automated controls, plant
optimization, health and safety management, and other functions are
provided by a large number of networked sensors.
Energy management
Integration
of sensing and actuation systems, connected to the Internet, is
likely to optimize energy consumption as a whole. It is expected that IoT
devices will be integrated into all forms of energy consuming devices
(switches, power outlets, bulbs, televisions, etc.) and be able to communicate
with the utility supply company in order to effectively balance power
generation and energy
usage. Such devices would also offer the opportunity for users to remotely
control their devices, or centrally manage them via a cloud based interface, and enable advanced functions like scheduling (e.g., remotely powering on
or off heating systems, controlling ovens, changing lighting conditions etc.).
In fact, a few systems that allow remote control of electric outlets are
already available in the market, e.g., Belkin’s WeMo, Ambery Remote Power
Switch, Budderfly, Telkonet’s EcoGuard, WhizNets Inc., etc.
Besides home
based energy
management, the IoT is
especially relevant to the Smart Grid since it provides systems to gather and
act on energy and power-related information in an automated fashion with the
goal to improve the efficiency, reliability, economics, and sustainability of
the production and distribution of electricity. Using Advanced Metering Infrastructure (AMI) devices connected to the Internet backbone,
electric utilities can not only collect data from end-user connections, but
also manage other distribution automation devices like transformers and
reclosers.
Medical and healthcare systems
IoT devices
can be used to enable remote
health monitoring and emergency
notification systems. These
health monitoring devices can range from blood pressure and heart rate monitors
to advanced devices capable of monitoring specialized implants, such as
pacemakers or advanced hearing aids. Specialized sensors can also be equipped
within living spaces to monitor the health and general well-being of senior
citizens, while also ensuring that proper treatment is being administered and
assisting people regain lost mobility via therapy as well. Other consumer
devices to encourage healthy living, such as, connected scales or wearable
heart monitors, are also a
possibility with the IoT. More and more end-to-end health monitoring IoT
platforms are coming up for antenatal and chronic patients, helping one manage
health vitals and recurring medication requirements.
Building and home automation
IoT devices
can be used to monitor and control the mechanical, electrical and electronic
systems used in various types of buildings (e.g., public and private,
industrial, institutions, or residential) in home automation and building
automation systems.
Transportation
The IoT can assist in integration of
communications, control, and information processing across various transportation systems. Application of the
IoT extends to all aspects of transportation systems (i.e. the vehicle, the
infrastructure, and the driver or user). Dynamic interaction between these
components of a transport system enables inter and intra vehicular
communication, smart
traffic control, smart parking, electronic toll collection systems, logistic and fleet
management, vehicle control, and safety and road
assistance
Agricultural
IOT helps in increasing the quality, quantity,
sustainability and cost effectiveness of agricultural production. Today’s large
and local farms can, for example, leverage IoT to remotely monitor sensors that
can detect soil moisture, crop growth and livestock feed levels, remotely
manage and control their smart connected harvesters and irrigation equipment,
and utilize artificial intelligence based analytics to quickly fulfil operational
data combined with 3rd party information, such as weather services,
to provide new insights and improve decision making.
Industries most affected by IOT
Healthcare – Healthcare has emerged as one of the most
promising industries for IoT. Over the past few years, healthcare providers
have increasingly become connected through the use of Wi-Fi-enabled medical
tools and devices, hospitals are able to collect record and analyse data faster
and more accurately. It will also help in real time monitoring. Well
established corporations like Philips, Verizon & Qualcomm already have a number of programs offered to healthcare providers
and patients using IoT tools. Philips offers Tele Station that transmits vital sign data from
the patient at home to the health care provider. It also offers a number of
wireless monitoring devices. Verizon offers a solution dubbed Converged
Health Management, which remotely monitors patients’ vitals at
their homes, and sends the real time biometric information to health care
givers onto PCs, tablets, and smartphones. QUALCOMM has developed a cloud-based
platform dubbed the 2net Platform, which enables
the wireless transfer, storage, and display of medical device data, and is
natively interoperable with a number of existing medical devices and
applications, and is HIPAA compliant. It includes wireless ultrasound
monitoring and remote vital sign monitoring from hospital rooms.
Retail - With
IOT, IoT technology, in-store retailers now have an opportunity to level the
playing field by providing customers a more personalized shopping experience,
created using a variety of IoT tools. Retailers are increasingly adopting usage
of Radio Frequency Identification
(RFID) tags to identify individual items in a
store. With RFID tags, retail stores are able to efficiently track inventory
and continuously update merchandise information.
Cities most affected by IOT
Top smart
cities as per Forbes 2015
·
Barcelona(scored
high on environment and smart parking)
·
New York
city(scored high on Smart street lightning and smart traffic management)
·
London(Scored
high on technology and open data)
·
Nice(Scored
high on environment and energy cohesion)
·
Singapore(Scored
high on smart traffic management and creative use of technology)
Based on the Innovation Cities Index, here are the top 10 smart cities in the
world to date:
1. Vienna Vienna was the only city that ranked in the
top 10 in every category in the Innovation cities Index. It is well ahead of
the pack in establishing brave smart-city targets and tracking their progress,
in particular with programs like the Smart Energy Vision 2050, Roadmap 2020,
and Action Plan 2012-2015. Ideas and vision is one thing but incorporating
these concepts from planning stage, engaging stakeholders on every platform,
means Vienna is leading the way for smart city technologies.
2. Toronto. The highest rated smart city in North America, Toronto scores
quite well across the board. The big names in Technology recognise this too –
IBM recently opened a Business Analytics Solutions Centre in the city and
Toronto is also an active member of C40 megacities. There are also private
sector initiatives like Smart Commute Toronto which have been launched to help
the city’s transport efficiency.
3. Paris. Paris was highly rated in several
categories including innovation, green cities in Europe, and digital
governance. Paris was already on the world map for its highly successful bike
sharing program, Velib, and it is following up this success with a similar
scheme for Electric Vehicles (Evs).
4. New York. New York
scored higher than most other cities in the ranking in all of the categories.
New York partnered with IBM in 2009 to launch the IBM Business Analytics
Solution Centre to address “the growing demand for the complex capabilities
needed to build smarter cities and help clients optimize all manner of business
processes and business decisions.” This has resulted in helping the city
prevent fires and protect first responders as well as identify questionable tax
refund claims—a move that is expected to save the city about $100 million over
a five-year period.
5. Stockholm. Home to the HQ of Ericsson, pioneers of the
‘Networked Society’, Stockholm scores highly on the Innovation Cities Index for
obvious reasons; it has a long track record of focused initiatives to drive the
progress of ICT infrastructure. The city has a large service sector which accounts
for roughly 85 percent of all jobs, and in combination with the near total
absence of heavy industry, makes Stockholm one of the world’s cleanest metro
areas. Stockholm was also the first city in the world to introduce 4G/LTE
mobile services.
6. London. The UK capital also scored relatively high
across the board. London has been well-recognized for some of its
sustainability innovations i.e. congestion tax and its robust transport system.
The city is home to Smart Cities
research centre housed at Imperial College, which focuses on initiatives in
hope of making the city more efficient and innovative. And most conveniently
for its citizens London has also announced a partnership with O2 to launch the
largest free Wi-Fi network in Europe.
7. Tokyo. Tokyo is the first Asian city on this list,
scoring well in both the innovation and digital city categories. In 2011, the
city announced plans to create a smart town in the suburbs. In partnership with
Panasonic, Accenture, and Tokyo Gas, the eco-burb will contain homes that
integrate solar panels, storage batteries, and energy efficient appliances all
connected to a smart grid. Tokyo is also focused on promoting smart mobility
solutions.
8. Berlin. Berlin also
performs well across the board, with good scores in innovation and green-ness.
One of the most interesting initiatives Berlin has focused on collaboration
with BMW. Together, they are testing out vehicle-to-grid (V2G) technologies in
the hopes of creating a virtual power plant from electric vehicles.
9. Hong Kong. Hong Kong scored quite well in key areas,
Hong Kong is experimenting with Radio Frequency Identification (RFID)
technology in its airport, as well as throughout the agriculture supply chain.
The city has also been a leader in the adoption of smart cards, which are
already used by millions of residents for services like public transit, library
access, building access, shopping, and car parks.
10. Barcelona. Barcelona was recently ranked the number two
smart city in Spain in the IDC report. The city is a pioneer in smart city and
low-carbon solutions. It was among the first in the world to introduce a solar
thermal ordinance about a decade ago. It recently launched the LIVE EV project
to promote the adoption of Evs and charging infrastructure, and the city also
recently announced a major partnership to develop a living lab for smart-city
innovation.
Trust it was a nice reading retreat for you , will continue on our word toy The IOT in India in my next blog for time being put your reviews and remarks and connect with me at akxmails@gmail.com and on twitter @AshutoshNow .... Thanks guys see you again ..


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