INTERNET OF THINGS
Name: Nallapuneni V S Thejaswi
E-mail: saitejaswi295@gmail.com
Twitter Id: @nvsteju (3019967876)
University: CVR College of Engineering
Year/Semester: 3/2
Branch: Computer Science
INTRODUCTION
• The Internet of Things (IoT) is a scenario in which objects,
animals or people are provided with unique identifiers and
the ability to transfer data over a network without requiring
human-to-human or human-to-computer interaction.
• The internet of Things is the next-generation energy friendly
connected devices transforming the economy and the
way we live.
• This is a new paradigm of buissness.
INTERNET OF THINGS:
• To make lives easier (think: turn on your heat before you get
home),
• Drive efficiency (think: turn on your washing machine when
electricity usage and prices fall in the middle of the night),
and
• Help us anticipate things without a trip to a specialist (think:
full-body health monitors or car engine diagnostics).
• But before this can be accomplished, we need to establish
common software standards, build reliable platforms (think
iOS or Android) that others can build from, and develop
sophisticated software that can analyze more data than has
ever been analyzed (think Big Data) to fully realize the
potential of the IoT.
TRENDS
• Connectivity: Connectivity will drive the use of semiconductors to
manage the communications,driven by Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, ZigBee,
NFC, and other IoT standards.
• Smartphones: Smartphones are now becoming the personal
gateway to the IoT, serving as a remote control or hub for the
connected home, connected car, or the health and fitness
devices consumers are increasingly starting to wear.
• Enablers: I see increased share for Wi-Fi, sensors and low-cost
microcontrollers.
• Platforms: focus on software applications for managing
communications between devices, middleware, storage, and
data analytics.
• Industrials: Home automation is at the forefront of the early
product opportunity, while factory floor optimization may lead the
efficiency side.
• IPv6 – Most networking equipment now supports
IPv6, the newest version of the Internet Protocol (IP)
standard that is intended to replace IPv4. IPv4
supports 32-bit addresses, which translates to about
4.3 billion addresses – a number that has become
largely exhausted by all the connected devices
globally. In contrast, IPv6 can support 128-bit
addresses, translating to approximately 3.4 x 1038
addresses – an almost limitless number that can
amply handle all conceivable IoT devices.
INTERESTING AREAS
• IPv6’s huge increase in address space is an important factor in the
development of the Internet of Things.
• I intend to work on establishing a common set of standards between
companies, education systems and to common things
• The same type of cabling, applications, protocol that will apply to all the
things.
TECHNOLOGICAL:
 Architecture(edge devices, servers, discovery services, security etc).
 Governance,naming,identity,interfaces
 Service openness
 Connection of real and virtual worlds.
THANK YOU
Internet of Things is when milkcarton
tells u it’s running low and it’s time to buy milk.

Internet of Things

  • 1.
    INTERNET OF THINGS Name:Nallapuneni V S Thejaswi E-mail: [email protected] Twitter Id: @nvsteju (3019967876) University: CVR College of Engineering Year/Semester: 3/2 Branch: Computer Science
  • 2.
    INTRODUCTION • The Internetof Things (IoT) is a scenario in which objects, animals or people are provided with unique identifiers and the ability to transfer data over a network without requiring human-to-human or human-to-computer interaction. • The internet of Things is the next-generation energy friendly connected devices transforming the economy and the way we live. • This is a new paradigm of buissness.
  • 3.
    INTERNET OF THINGS: •To make lives easier (think: turn on your heat before you get home), • Drive efficiency (think: turn on your washing machine when electricity usage and prices fall in the middle of the night), and • Help us anticipate things without a trip to a specialist (think: full-body health monitors or car engine diagnostics). • But before this can be accomplished, we need to establish common software standards, build reliable platforms (think iOS or Android) that others can build from, and develop sophisticated software that can analyze more data than has ever been analyzed (think Big Data) to fully realize the potential of the IoT.
  • 4.
    TRENDS • Connectivity: Connectivitywill drive the use of semiconductors to manage the communications,driven by Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, ZigBee, NFC, and other IoT standards. • Smartphones: Smartphones are now becoming the personal gateway to the IoT, serving as a remote control or hub for the connected home, connected car, or the health and fitness devices consumers are increasingly starting to wear. • Enablers: I see increased share for Wi-Fi, sensors and low-cost microcontrollers. • Platforms: focus on software applications for managing communications between devices, middleware, storage, and data analytics. • Industrials: Home automation is at the forefront of the early product opportunity, while factory floor optimization may lead the efficiency side.
  • 5.
    • IPv6 –Most networking equipment now supports IPv6, the newest version of the Internet Protocol (IP) standard that is intended to replace IPv4. IPv4 supports 32-bit addresses, which translates to about 4.3 billion addresses – a number that has become largely exhausted by all the connected devices globally. In contrast, IPv6 can support 128-bit addresses, translating to approximately 3.4 x 1038 addresses – an almost limitless number that can amply handle all conceivable IoT devices.
  • 6.
    INTERESTING AREAS • IPv6’shuge increase in address space is an important factor in the development of the Internet of Things. • I intend to work on establishing a common set of standards between companies, education systems and to common things • The same type of cabling, applications, protocol that will apply to all the things. TECHNOLOGICAL:  Architecture(edge devices, servers, discovery services, security etc).  Governance,naming,identity,interfaces  Service openness  Connection of real and virtual worlds.
  • 7.
    THANK YOU Internet ofThings is when milkcarton tells u it’s running low and it’s time to buy milk.