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Internet of Things Consortium

Internet of Things Consortium

Les objets connectés et agents intelligents amorcent la quatrième révolution industrielle Ce mois-ci, les industriels du monde entier avaient rendez-vous à Berlin et Hanovre pour assister à deux salons d’envergure internationale. L’occasion pour les grandes entreprises allemandes de populariser le concept d’Industrie 4.0. J’imagine tout à fait que vous puissiez être sceptique à l’idée de découvrir un énième concept (sur la mode du web 2.0, de l’entreprise 2.0 et cie), mais vous seriez surpris d’apprendre que c’est la chancelière Angela Merkel, accompagnée du président russe, qui a en fait l’article lors de l’inauguration du CeBIT. Autrement appelée integrated industry, l’industrie 4.0 désigne les technologies et procédés industriels permettant de faire communiquer et interagir tous les acteurs d’un processus de production : What is Industry 4.0. Lancé en début d’année dernière, le plan “Industrie 4.0″ bénéficie du support du Ministère Allemand de l’Éducation et de la Recherche, ainsi que d’un fond d’investissement de 200 M d’€.

les plateformes d'information Platform/amee-platform Our Vision: "Environmental Intelligence, Everywhere. We believe that information about our environmental impact can and should be available everywhere, to help us better measure and manage resources. Platform/arkessa-platform Arkessa enables remote devices to operate, be monitored, managed and controlled as though they were connected directly to your desktop, tablet or smart phone. Platform/arrayent The Arrayent Connect Platform is an "IoT platform that enables you to connect your products to value-added smartphone and web applications with unprecedented low-cost and simplicity." Platform/axeda-platform From their site: Axeda is the leading cloud platform provider for connected products and M2M applications. Platform/bugswarm Platform/carriots-cloud-platform Our goal at Carriots is to help you build applications for the Internet of Things. Platform/evrythng-platform Because every physical thing can be digitally connected. Platform/grovestreams Platform/hp-cense-platform

How the “internet of things” will replace the web - Quartz The second in a series. We’ve already written about why 2014 is really, finally the year that the “internet of things”—that effort to remotely control every object on earth—becomes visible in our everyday lives. But most of us don’t recognize just how far the internet of things will go, from souped-up gadgets that track our every move to a world that predicts our actions and emotions. In this way, the internet of things will become more central to society than the internet as we know it today. The internet of things will create a world of “invisible buttons” Rooms that know when you’re present and how you’re feeling can illuminate themselves appropriately Philips The pioneer species of the internet of things is the smartphone. That smartphones gather traffic data without their users ever being aware that they’re doing so shows how the internet of things replaces the internet-related actions we already know—click a button, navigate a webpage—with context.

Internet of Things The Internet of Things (IoT) is the network of physical objects or "things" embedded with electronics, software, sensors and connectivity to enable it to achieve greater value and service by exchanging data with the manufacturer, operator and/or other connected devices. Each thing is uniquely identifiable through its embedded computing system but is able to interoperate within the existing Internet infrastructure. The term “Internet of Things” was first documented by a British visionary, Kevin Ashton, in 1999.[1] Typically, IoT is expected to offer advanced connectivity of devices, systems, and services that goes beyond machine-to-machine communications (M2M) and covers a variety of protocols, domains, and applications.[2] The interconnection of these embedded devices (including smart objects), is expected to usher in automation in nearly all fields, while also enabling advanced applications like a Smart Grid.[3] Early history[edit] In its original interpretation,[when?] Media[edit]

La rébellion digitale devient globale - Veille - Société Au-delà de la simple posture subversive isolée, les actions des Anonymous, récemment observées, incarnent une nouvelle forme de contestation. Initiatives encore anecdotiques, gestes microcosmiques, ce sont les symptômes d'une dynamique de changement bien plus large. Objectivement et quelle que soit la population rencontrée, même chez les plus âgés, la remise en cause des institutions est assumée et revendiquée. Les citoyens consommateurs se désolidarisent des difficultés des grandes entreprises. Clémence Sanlis (ID Map) : « Les rebelles proposent un modèle souple et collaboratif, où le citoyen demeure libre d? Paradoxalement, l'esprit baroque des fins de cycles, qui consiste à dédramatiser, à jouer avec les codes funestes pour ne plus craindre le vide, cohabite avec le calme de la Toile blanche, où tout est à construire. Parallèlement, la mode s'oriente vers un design naturel, simple, essentiel, que l'on peut qualifier de rudimentaire. Clémence Sanlis, ID Map

NanoService - Sensinode Ltd Sensinode’s NanoService™ solution provides end-to-end web services optimized for the unique constraints of M2M deployments. Features of NanoServices include: high efficiency, resource discovery and management, eventing, semantic naming, semantic search and end-to-end security. The NanoService Platform (NSP) is a flexible and highly-scalable product designed to enable the deployment of challenging M2M applications on private server, private cloud or public cloud environments. It provides a directory and semantic lookup of all M2M nodes and resources in the system, provides transparent proxy services between the large-resource traditional Internet and constrained-resource protocols, and supports an eventing model that is critical to the effectiveness of Embedded Web applications. Complete graphical Reference Applications and Java SDKs with source code, along with device libraries, decreases time to market for both M2M device and Web Apps. NanoService™ Platform Product Flyer (PDF)

Forget the Internet of Things: Here Comes the ‘Internet of Cars’ | Opinion Illustration: Ross Patton/Wired What if large groups of people could go beyond ridesharing – replacing traditional car ownership altogether through on-demand access to the cars they want: a convertible in the summer, an SUV for winter ski trips? What if driving skills could be computed as a score that warned us of bad drivers nearby – real time, on the road – also enabling navigation systems to offer safer alternative routes? Imagine if we could get rid of traffic jams and accidents altogether. What if automakers could subsidize our car purchases by working with telecommunications and other companies that want to capitalize on the lifetime revenue opportunity of a connected driver? Whether you embrace or object to these scenarios, they’re not too far away. Recognized as a leading expert on the evolution of the automotive industry and the connected vehicle, Thilo Koslowski is Vice President, Distinguished Analyst, and founder of the Automotive practice at Gartner Inc. But what is it?

The Internet of Things and Education | ETC blog With the Internet connecting us to many things (media, photos, information, etc.) can it also connect us to physical objects? Can we launch applications on our computer by just touching a physical object? Can one physical object talk to another physical object through an Internet connect and command it to do a physical act or feed it data? The answer is yes and this phenomena is called “The Internet of Things”. What is exactly the Internet of Things? According to Wikipedia the Internet of Things “refers to uniquely identifiable objects (things) and their virtual representations in an Internet-like structure. So how does the Internet of Things exactly work? If students are collecting data out in the field for research, tagging physical objects to find and analyze data about the object (and have to feed into other programs for analysis) is one way the Internet of Things can be used in education. Say a student created a work of art.

"L'Age de la multitude", de Nicolas Colin et Henri Verdier LE MONDE ECONOMIE | • Mis à jour le | Par David Larousserie Nouvelle révolution ? Quatrième secteur ? La première partie, assez classique, rappelle les caractéristiques de l'économie numérique : rapidité des mises sur le marché de nouveaux produits et services, volatilité des situations acquises (AOL rachetant Time Warner, Google balayant AOL, Facebook ébranlant Google). La suite est plus inattendue. L'enjeu, pour les acteurs, est de mettre au point les techniques qui capteront à leur profit ce qui doit désormais être considéré comme une externalité positive. Pour ce faire, il faut construire des plates-formes offrant des possibilités d'accès aux données et aux ressources des entreprises en échange de nouveaux logiciels, de données personnelles, de recommandations, fournies par ce capital humain "hors contrat". Plutôt qu'un crédit impôt recherche, il faut une police d'assurance-risque rétribuant les projets de recherche & développement qui ont échoué. L'Age de la multitude.

Internet of Everything The Internet of Everything (IoE) should be understood as the next evolutionary stage of the Internet of Things (IoT) – that is, a technology concept that sees previously unconnected objects and processes being converged with the ones that are digital-first by their nature. This all-encompassing convergence of physical and digital domains is set to disrupt individual organizations and entire industries like nothing before. On one hand, the IoE is being enabled by advancements with standardized, ultra-low-power wireless technologies. Likes of Bluetooth and ZigBee have proven instrumental in driving sensor and node implementations, while Wi-Fi and cellular connectivity serve as a backbone for transferring the collected data to the cloud. On the other hand, the emergence of Big Data and associated analytics are taking the potential value of the wirelessly-enabled IoE applications and services to a whole new level. View more research in this service...

The Internet of Things In most organizations, information travels along familiar routes. Proprietary information is lodged in databases and analyzed in reports and then rises up the management chain. Information also originates externally—gathered from public sources, harvested from the Internet, or purchased from information suppliers. But the predictable pathways of information are changing: the physical world itself is becoming a type of information system. In what’s called the Internet of Things, sensors and actuators embedded in physical objects—from roadways to pacemakers—are linked through wired and wireless networks, often using the same Internet Protocol (IP) that connects the Internet. These networks churn out huge volumes of data that flow to computers for analysis. Pill-shaped microcameras already traverse the human digestive tract and send back thousands of images to pinpoint sources of illness. Podcast When virtual-world capabilities meet real-world businesses Exhibit Enlarge 1. 2. 3. 1. 2. 3.

Infographie : la place du community manager dans l'entreprise Cet article a été publié il y a 1 an 9 mois 25 jours, il est possible qu’il ne soit plus à jour. Les informations proposées sont donc peut-être expirées. Le sujet fait débat ces jours-ci : quelle est la place réelle du community manager ? Quel est son rôle ? Parmi les chiffres marquants, on apprend que les jobboards restent le principal moyen pour décrocher un emploi, 23% des CM en poste étant concernés. Ce qui est sûr, c’est que le métier a évolué depuis un an. Envie d’autres chiffres ?

Liste des entreprises utlisant l'internet des objets by chopinjeremy Apr 2

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