Digital Transformation of the Enterprise. What IT leaders need to know!IndicThreads
This presentation will be about the changing times and nature of IT services delivered to the consumer. In the past, it used to be delivered through thick or thin clients on the desktop. Today, these are primarily delivered to the mobile in the form of a digital service.
While a lot of talk is about disruption that the smart phones have brought, the truth is, that the backend has to be more industrialised than ever before due to the massive number of transactions that terminate in the legacy IT infrastructure. Companies need both, industrial IT and innovation IT to be able to compete effectively in the digital marketplace. This presentation will be about the different imperatives the new IT leaders have to think about in the digital era.
Session at the IndicThreads.com Confence held in Pune, India on 27-28 Feb 2015
http://www.indicthreads.com
http://pune15.indicthreads.com
This document discusses the exponential growth of mobility and the internet of things. It describes how mobile technology is profoundly impacting society and how we live, learn, work and play. It outlines three waves of innovation in mobile technology and predicts that by 2050 there will be 1 trillion connected devices. The document discusses emerging technologies like self-driving cars, advanced sensors, artificial intelligence and life-form computing. It envisions what the world may look like surrounded by intelligence and previews potential mobile technologies in 2020 and 2033. The document promotes several MLOVE conferences focused on discussing the impact of mobility on areas like media, marketing and smart cities.
Sudha Jamthe keynote Disruptive Innovation From Internet of ThingsSudha Jamthe
Keynote about Disruptive Innovation from IoT from IoT Growth and Innovation Conference, San Francisco. Aug 17 2015.
Sudha Jamthe takes a strategic outlook to the impact of IoT and how the innovation from IoT transforms businesses in many ways, in many dimensions with examples of Audi TT Brochure hack, Tesla Motors, Self Driving Cars, The Things Network, Amsterdam's Beacon Mile, Estimote Beacons for Retail, Amazon's Dash Button, 3D printing and Google Nest.
Future Business Disruptions with Data and Internet of Things Sudha Jamthe key...Sudha Jamthe
Sudha Jamthe's Keynote slides from "IoT Data Analytics and Visualization Conf" Feb 2016, Palo Alto.
Topic "Future Business Disruptions with Data and Internet of Things".
- Value from Data and IoT
- Business Disruptions
- Human Machine Interface
- Impact on all facets of our lives
The document discusses the evolution of smart applications from mobile apps to voice AI and natural language interfaces. It notes that the mobile app market is saturated, most apps are deleted quickly, and users only engage with a small number. The document then argues that voice AI accessed through ubiquitous displays like TVs provides a more natural interface that does not require downloading apps or learning a user interface. It suggests voice AI combined with visual displays opens new possibilities for applications in various domains like commerce, social media, and more.
The “other side” of MWC: IoT’s turn for the Kool-Aid?Geoff Ballinger
This document discusses issues around defining and securing the Internet of Things (IoT). It notes differing definitions of IoT and questions who or what IoT refers to. Concerns are raised about the security challenges of connecting large numbers of low-power devices for many years without updates. The potential end of privacy and importance of security is highlighted. Finally, it questions how various entities like telecom companies and IoT companies will relate to one another.
This document discusses three waves of computing: the Internet, mobile, and social. For each wave, it identifies the early enabling technologies and inherent advantages. It then discusses how massive amounts of data can be handled through teams of generalists and specialists. Finally, it suggests that future advantages will come from being able to process and act on available data through connected devices and software.
Digital Transformation of the Enterprise. What IT leaders need to know!IndicThreads
This presentation will be about the changing times and nature of IT services delivered to the consumer. In the past, it used to be delivered through thick or thin clients on the desktop. Today, these are primarily delivered to the mobile in the form of a digital service.
While a lot of talk is about disruption that the smart phones have brought, the truth is, that the backend has to be more industrialised than ever before due to the massive number of transactions that terminate in the legacy IT infrastructure. Companies need both, industrial IT and innovation IT to be able to compete effectively in the digital marketplace. This presentation will be about the different imperatives the new IT leaders have to think about in the digital era.
Session at the IndicThreads.com Confence held in Pune, India on 27-28 Feb 2015
http://www.indicthreads.com
http://pune15.indicthreads.com
This document discusses the exponential growth of mobility and the internet of things. It describes how mobile technology is profoundly impacting society and how we live, learn, work and play. It outlines three waves of innovation in mobile technology and predicts that by 2050 there will be 1 trillion connected devices. The document discusses emerging technologies like self-driving cars, advanced sensors, artificial intelligence and life-form computing. It envisions what the world may look like surrounded by intelligence and previews potential mobile technologies in 2020 and 2033. The document promotes several MLOVE conferences focused on discussing the impact of mobility on areas like media, marketing and smart cities.
Sudha Jamthe keynote Disruptive Innovation From Internet of ThingsSudha Jamthe
Keynote about Disruptive Innovation from IoT from IoT Growth and Innovation Conference, San Francisco. Aug 17 2015.
Sudha Jamthe takes a strategic outlook to the impact of IoT and how the innovation from IoT transforms businesses in many ways, in many dimensions with examples of Audi TT Brochure hack, Tesla Motors, Self Driving Cars, The Things Network, Amsterdam's Beacon Mile, Estimote Beacons for Retail, Amazon's Dash Button, 3D printing and Google Nest.
Future Business Disruptions with Data and Internet of Things Sudha Jamthe key...Sudha Jamthe
Sudha Jamthe's Keynote slides from "IoT Data Analytics and Visualization Conf" Feb 2016, Palo Alto.
Topic "Future Business Disruptions with Data and Internet of Things".
- Value from Data and IoT
- Business Disruptions
- Human Machine Interface
- Impact on all facets of our lives
The document discusses the evolution of smart applications from mobile apps to voice AI and natural language interfaces. It notes that the mobile app market is saturated, most apps are deleted quickly, and users only engage with a small number. The document then argues that voice AI accessed through ubiquitous displays like TVs provides a more natural interface that does not require downloading apps or learning a user interface. It suggests voice AI combined with visual displays opens new possibilities for applications in various domains like commerce, social media, and more.
The “other side” of MWC: IoT’s turn for the Kool-Aid?Geoff Ballinger
This document discusses issues around defining and securing the Internet of Things (IoT). It notes differing definitions of IoT and questions who or what IoT refers to. Concerns are raised about the security challenges of connecting large numbers of low-power devices for many years without updates. The potential end of privacy and importance of security is highlighted. Finally, it questions how various entities like telecom companies and IoT companies will relate to one another.
This document discusses three waves of computing: the Internet, mobile, and social. For each wave, it identifies the early enabling technologies and inherent advantages. It then discusses how massive amounts of data can be handled through teams of generalists and specialists. Finally, it suggests that future advantages will come from being able to process and act on available data through connected devices and software.
Business disruptions with Internet of Ihings by sudha jamthe sap d kom 2016Sudha Jamthe
The document discusses how the Internet of Things (IoT) will disrupt businesses globally. It describes how IoT can disrupt ordinary products like water filters by enabling automatic reorders. It also discusses how IoT will disrupt healthcare through personal devices, senior care using anomaly detection, and factory maintenance using predictive analytics. The document outlines how data is the nerve center of IoT and how businesses can derive value from consumer, city, logistics and other IoT-generated data through customer demand estimates, anomaly detection, and predictive maintenance. It concludes by discussing how IoT will disrupt the human-machine interface through autonomous machines that help, talk to each other, and make other machines.
This document discusses Google's Tango project and virtual reality technology. It provides details about Tango, a platform developed by Google that enables mobile devices to detect their position without GPS by making over 1.4 million measurements per second. Applications of Tango mentioned include indoor mapping, navigation, and game development. The document also discusses virtual reality, how the HTC Vive was recognized as product of the year for its work in VR, and potential applications of virtual reality in areas like business, training, and engineering/design.
Manlike machines have fascinated humans since ancient times. The modern robots start to take shape with the industrial revolution. In the 20th century robots were mostly industrial machines you would see in factories, like car factories.
Today, robots can have sensors, vision, they can hear and understand. They can connect to the cloud for more information. However, we are still in the early stages of robotics and robots will need to go a long way to become useful as a ubiquitous general purpose devices.
We are currently living in times of great transformation. As the smartphone revolution ends, the next set of revolutions are starting. One of these revolutions is We have over the last couple of decade seen the Internet become the most powerful disrupting force in the world, connecting everyone and transforming businesses. Now everyday objects - things we use are getting smart with sensors and software. And they are connecting. What does this mean?
In this lecture we explore the Internet of Things, IoT or Internet of Everything
The consumer electronics show in Las Vegas displayed the latest innovations in technology, including televisions up to 150 inches with 5mm widths, the world's smallest wireless printer, and a computer table called SURFEX that works entirely through touch. Advances were also shown in areas like robotics, batteries lasting 1000 times longer, and biodegradable items made from corn derivatives. The show highlighted how emerging technologies will impact various areas like the environment through waste recycling, global communication, business and trade, and improving life through applications of robotics and new equipment.
What was the biggest technological event in 2014? The smartwatch? iPhone6? The Sony hack? Looking back at 2014 it is not some device or moment, its more like the continued development of ongoing trends.
In this Annual State of the Technology Lecture, I will look at where we are beginning the year 2015. We look at the network economy, the sharing economy, wearables, and internet of things.
And we look at the most popular craze in 2014.
This document discusses emerging technologies and their potential impacts. It begins by noting that while technology progress is often emphasized, the social and cultural impacts are also important to consider. Several key technologies are then summarized, including smartphones and their dominance, the internet of things, digital transformation of businesses, 3D printing, robotics like self-driving cars, augmented and virtual reality, and machine learning. While the future possibilities seem vast, challenges like inequality and the environment remain, though optimism about abundance through technologies is expressed.
Ubiquitous computing refers to the third wave of computing where technology is integrated into everyday objects and recedes into the background. Examples mentioned include interactive wallpaper that functions as a living display, remote cameras for home monitoring, and intelligent garbage cans that sort and compact waste. A ubiquitous city is one where virtually all systems and objects are connected through wireless networks and RFID tags, creating an environment saturated with information technology.
Ori Inbar is the CEO and founder of AugmentedReality.org and director of the Augmented World Expo. The document discusses the history and trends of augmented reality, including its transition from gimmick to valuable tool, from mobile to wearable devices, and from consumer to enterprise applications. It also covers trends like using AR to 3D-ify the world by overlaying digital information directly onto the real world through location-based applications and sensors.
Marketing dDisruptions with Internet of ThingsSudha Jamthe
Sudha Jamthe's talk at NorCal BMA on May 12 2016.
Marketing Disruptions with Internet of Things and how IoT is calling marketers for leadership. Sudhs shares her IDEAS framework on the role of Marketers in shaping the IoT Ecosystem.
The smartphone has completely changed how people communicate, collaborate, discover, shop and do all sorts of things. This always-on device is in order of magnitude more powerful than the biggest computers in the 60s and now we carry it with us wherever we go. Smartphones combined with cloud technologies and real-time algorithms, are moving us to a transformation phase as software algorithms will transform traditional businesses be it in retail, banking, construction, education and so on. We are entering times of great disruption.
Presentation at Nýherji's AI conference 18.10.2016
Mike Shaw discusses how IT can help businesses facing digital disruption. He outlines how digital disruptors operate using minimum viable products, public experimentation, and continuous innovation. Disruptors use mobile/wearable apps, data science in products, and hybrid/fluid apps. Shaw argues IT needs a "two-speed" model with reliable core IT and more agile fluid IT. Fluid IT focuses on continuous innovation, hybrid apps, data science/big data, and engaging customer experiences across devices. Core and fluid IT must cooperate in areas like service brokering, APIs, continuous delivery, and protecting all data and apps.
The document discusses the rise of the iPhone and its potential to replace personal computers. It outlines the iPhone's popular features like its touch screen, apps, and long battery life. It argues that PCs are becoming outdated technology while phones offer a more dynamic experience. It questions whether the iPhone will fully replace PCs and what PC companies and Apple can do to respectively compete or improve the iPhone further.
In the early days of product development, the technology is inferior and lacking in performance. The focus is very much on the technology itself. The users are enthusiast who like the idea of the product, find use for it, and except the lack of performance. Then as the product becomes more mature, other factors become important, such as price, design, features, portability. The product moves from being a technology to become a consumer item, and even a commodity.
In this lecture we explore the change from technology focus to consumer focus, and look at why people stand in line overnight to buy the latest gadgets.
In 2011 a new app called FourSqure became wildly popular. It allowed people to "check-in" to a location so other could see where you are. This might be a stupid service to provide, but still 55 millions people signed up generating over 6 millions of check-ins. Think about all the data that got created about places and people.
Local is the Lo in SoLoMo, the buzz word. Local is not only about location, it´s also about your digital track record. Over 70% of Netflix users watch the films recommend. Facebook and Google customize the content the provide to you, presumably to create a better user experience. However, there are some problems with filtering too much. We might get stuck in a bubble and never exposed to new ideas.
Everything we do is tracked, creating digital footprint. Mining data to understand people´s behaviour is getting to be a huge and valuable business. Advertisers see opportunities in getting direct to their target groups.
The document discusses latest computing devices including the Mac Mini, tablet PCs, and ultrabooks. It also discusses latest technology innovations such as robotics, types of robotics, and their uses. Robotics are defined and various types are described including mobile, industrial, domestic, medical, service, and military robots. Their uses in areas like factories, surgery, mail delivery, and entertainment are provided. The challenges of robots including their costs and inability to respond in emergencies are also noted. The document concludes with a discussion of communication and networking technologies and the definition and focus of social networking services.
Mobile Horizons Istanbul
Mobile’s Big Evolution
Andrew Bud, Chairman of MEF and CEO of iProov
This presentation was made on June 4, 2013 at the Mobile Horizons Istanbul conference.
This thought-leadership forum was a unique conference about the disruptive changes caused by mobile technologies: Wearable Technologies, New interfaces, Mobile Retail, Big Data, Connected Life, and more!
Featuring international mobile visionaries and Turkish business leaders Mobile Horizons Istanbul was held at an exclusive venue on the shores of the Bosphorus
For more information, please visit the website at www.mobile-horizons.com or facebook at www.facebook.com/mobilehorizons.
1. The document discusses the opportunities and challenges for makers in the emerging IoT (Internet of Things) economy, which the author calls the "MoT" or "Maker of Things" economy.
2. It outlines the rise of the maker movement in Taiwan and the growth of makerspaces, with examples of innovative maker projects.
3. The document identifies challenges for makers in bringing their projects to market and proposes strategies by MakerPRO to help makers overcome these challenges through community building, events, workshops, and other support programs.
Business disruptions with Internet of Ihings by sudha jamthe sap d kom 2016Sudha Jamthe
The document discusses how the Internet of Things (IoT) will disrupt businesses globally. It describes how IoT can disrupt ordinary products like water filters by enabling automatic reorders. It also discusses how IoT will disrupt healthcare through personal devices, senior care using anomaly detection, and factory maintenance using predictive analytics. The document outlines how data is the nerve center of IoT and how businesses can derive value from consumer, city, logistics and other IoT-generated data through customer demand estimates, anomaly detection, and predictive maintenance. It concludes by discussing how IoT will disrupt the human-machine interface through autonomous machines that help, talk to each other, and make other machines.
This document discusses Google's Tango project and virtual reality technology. It provides details about Tango, a platform developed by Google that enables mobile devices to detect their position without GPS by making over 1.4 million measurements per second. Applications of Tango mentioned include indoor mapping, navigation, and game development. The document also discusses virtual reality, how the HTC Vive was recognized as product of the year for its work in VR, and potential applications of virtual reality in areas like business, training, and engineering/design.
Manlike machines have fascinated humans since ancient times. The modern robots start to take shape with the industrial revolution. In the 20th century robots were mostly industrial machines you would see in factories, like car factories.
Today, robots can have sensors, vision, they can hear and understand. They can connect to the cloud for more information. However, we are still in the early stages of robotics and robots will need to go a long way to become useful as a ubiquitous general purpose devices.
We are currently living in times of great transformation. As the smartphone revolution ends, the next set of revolutions are starting. One of these revolutions is We have over the last couple of decade seen the Internet become the most powerful disrupting force in the world, connecting everyone and transforming businesses. Now everyday objects - things we use are getting smart with sensors and software. And they are connecting. What does this mean?
In this lecture we explore the Internet of Things, IoT or Internet of Everything
The consumer electronics show in Las Vegas displayed the latest innovations in technology, including televisions up to 150 inches with 5mm widths, the world's smallest wireless printer, and a computer table called SURFEX that works entirely through touch. Advances were also shown in areas like robotics, batteries lasting 1000 times longer, and biodegradable items made from corn derivatives. The show highlighted how emerging technologies will impact various areas like the environment through waste recycling, global communication, business and trade, and improving life through applications of robotics and new equipment.
What was the biggest technological event in 2014? The smartwatch? iPhone6? The Sony hack? Looking back at 2014 it is not some device or moment, its more like the continued development of ongoing trends.
In this Annual State of the Technology Lecture, I will look at where we are beginning the year 2015. We look at the network economy, the sharing economy, wearables, and internet of things.
And we look at the most popular craze in 2014.
This document discusses emerging technologies and their potential impacts. It begins by noting that while technology progress is often emphasized, the social and cultural impacts are also important to consider. Several key technologies are then summarized, including smartphones and their dominance, the internet of things, digital transformation of businesses, 3D printing, robotics like self-driving cars, augmented and virtual reality, and machine learning. While the future possibilities seem vast, challenges like inequality and the environment remain, though optimism about abundance through technologies is expressed.
Ubiquitous computing refers to the third wave of computing where technology is integrated into everyday objects and recedes into the background. Examples mentioned include interactive wallpaper that functions as a living display, remote cameras for home monitoring, and intelligent garbage cans that sort and compact waste. A ubiquitous city is one where virtually all systems and objects are connected through wireless networks and RFID tags, creating an environment saturated with information technology.
Ori Inbar is the CEO and founder of AugmentedReality.org and director of the Augmented World Expo. The document discusses the history and trends of augmented reality, including its transition from gimmick to valuable tool, from mobile to wearable devices, and from consumer to enterprise applications. It also covers trends like using AR to 3D-ify the world by overlaying digital information directly onto the real world through location-based applications and sensors.
Marketing dDisruptions with Internet of ThingsSudha Jamthe
Sudha Jamthe's talk at NorCal BMA on May 12 2016.
Marketing Disruptions with Internet of Things and how IoT is calling marketers for leadership. Sudhs shares her IDEAS framework on the role of Marketers in shaping the IoT Ecosystem.
The smartphone has completely changed how people communicate, collaborate, discover, shop and do all sorts of things. This always-on device is in order of magnitude more powerful than the biggest computers in the 60s and now we carry it with us wherever we go. Smartphones combined with cloud technologies and real-time algorithms, are moving us to a transformation phase as software algorithms will transform traditional businesses be it in retail, banking, construction, education and so on. We are entering times of great disruption.
Presentation at Nýherji's AI conference 18.10.2016
Mike Shaw discusses how IT can help businesses facing digital disruption. He outlines how digital disruptors operate using minimum viable products, public experimentation, and continuous innovation. Disruptors use mobile/wearable apps, data science in products, and hybrid/fluid apps. Shaw argues IT needs a "two-speed" model with reliable core IT and more agile fluid IT. Fluid IT focuses on continuous innovation, hybrid apps, data science/big data, and engaging customer experiences across devices. Core and fluid IT must cooperate in areas like service brokering, APIs, continuous delivery, and protecting all data and apps.
The document discusses the rise of the iPhone and its potential to replace personal computers. It outlines the iPhone's popular features like its touch screen, apps, and long battery life. It argues that PCs are becoming outdated technology while phones offer a more dynamic experience. It questions whether the iPhone will fully replace PCs and what PC companies and Apple can do to respectively compete or improve the iPhone further.
In the early days of product development, the technology is inferior and lacking in performance. The focus is very much on the technology itself. The users are enthusiast who like the idea of the product, find use for it, and except the lack of performance. Then as the product becomes more mature, other factors become important, such as price, design, features, portability. The product moves from being a technology to become a consumer item, and even a commodity.
In this lecture we explore the change from technology focus to consumer focus, and look at why people stand in line overnight to buy the latest gadgets.
In 2011 a new app called FourSqure became wildly popular. It allowed people to "check-in" to a location so other could see where you are. This might be a stupid service to provide, but still 55 millions people signed up generating over 6 millions of check-ins. Think about all the data that got created about places and people.
Local is the Lo in SoLoMo, the buzz word. Local is not only about location, it´s also about your digital track record. Over 70% of Netflix users watch the films recommend. Facebook and Google customize the content the provide to you, presumably to create a better user experience. However, there are some problems with filtering too much. We might get stuck in a bubble and never exposed to new ideas.
Everything we do is tracked, creating digital footprint. Mining data to understand people´s behaviour is getting to be a huge and valuable business. Advertisers see opportunities in getting direct to their target groups.
The document discusses latest computing devices including the Mac Mini, tablet PCs, and ultrabooks. It also discusses latest technology innovations such as robotics, types of robotics, and their uses. Robotics are defined and various types are described including mobile, industrial, domestic, medical, service, and military robots. Their uses in areas like factories, surgery, mail delivery, and entertainment are provided. The challenges of robots including their costs and inability to respond in emergencies are also noted. The document concludes with a discussion of communication and networking technologies and the definition and focus of social networking services.
Mobile Horizons Istanbul
Mobile’s Big Evolution
Andrew Bud, Chairman of MEF and CEO of iProov
This presentation was made on June 4, 2013 at the Mobile Horizons Istanbul conference.
This thought-leadership forum was a unique conference about the disruptive changes caused by mobile technologies: Wearable Technologies, New interfaces, Mobile Retail, Big Data, Connected Life, and more!
Featuring international mobile visionaries and Turkish business leaders Mobile Horizons Istanbul was held at an exclusive venue on the shores of the Bosphorus
For more information, please visit the website at www.mobile-horizons.com or facebook at www.facebook.com/mobilehorizons.
1. The document discusses the opportunities and challenges for makers in the emerging IoT (Internet of Things) economy, which the author calls the "MoT" or "Maker of Things" economy.
2. It outlines the rise of the maker movement in Taiwan and the growth of makerspaces, with examples of innovative maker projects.
3. The document identifies challenges for makers in bringing their projects to market and proposes strategies by MakerPRO to help makers overcome these challenges through community building, events, workshops, and other support programs.
Shivananda Koteshwar, Director at Mediatek, gave a presentation on the Internet of Things (IoT) and Mediatek's role in the IoT space. The presentation discussed the history of IoT starting from devices like refrigerators and coffee pots being connected to the internet in the 1990s. It covered key elements of IoT like sensors, connectivity, analytics and challenges like energy, security and bandwidth. Examples of IoT applications in various industries were provided along with Mediatek's solution of hardware and software for enabling IoT device development.
This all content is about how does IOT involve in our life's and what is the history of it and what is the competencies or layers of IOT and where we are using IOT.
This presentation provides an overview of the Internet of Things (IoT). It defines IoT as interconnected computing devices, objects, animals or people that are provided with identifiers to transfer data over a network. The presentation outlines key features of IoT like intelligence, connectivity, sensing, expressing, energy and safety. It discusses technologies enabling IoT such as RFID, WiFi, barcodes, ZigBee and sensors. Examples of IoT applications mentioned include environmental monitoring, infrastructure management, industrial uses, energy management, healthcare, home automation and transport. Advantages include improved communication, automation, monitoring and efficiency while disadvantages include compatibility, privacy and security issues. The future of IoT is predicted to include world sensor networks, home
- Mobility has changed dramatically over the past few decades, with mobile subscriptions growing from 700 million in 2000 to nearly 6 billion in 2010, driven largely by adoption in developing countries.
- Emerging technologies like 5G networks, the Internet of Things, artificial intelligence, and wearable devices are pushing the boundaries of what mobility can enable.
- The mobile app ecosystem has grown exponentially, with over 250,000 apps created by 85,000 developers generating over a trillion events in 2012 alone.
The document discusses the Internet of Things (IoT). It defines IoT as connecting heterogeneous things to the internet, allowing them to interact and collaborate with minimal human involvement by giving things unique identifiers and the ability to transfer data over networks. It explains that IoT works by using sensor technologies, RFID, energy harvesting, and advanced internet protocols to give devices human-like senses. Finally, it outlines several current and future applications of IoT in areas like smart cities, smart environments, smart energy, smart agriculture, healthcare, retail, logistics, and industrial control, and discusses the large economic impact that IoT efficiencies could have.
This document provides an introduction to the Internet of Things (IoT). It begins by outlining upcoming sessions on IoT topics like web architecture, security, and applications. Real-world examples of IoT are then presented, including a smart toothbrush and solutions for improving water access. Key enablers of IoT like cheap sensors and bandwidth are discussed. IoT is defined and distinguished from the internet, noting IoT connects physical objects through sensors. Challenges like addressing billions of devices are addressed through technologies like IPv6. Finally, opportunities from IoT like new industries and the need for basic programming skills are covered.
The Internet of Things. How it Works. Why it Matters.Laurie Lamberth
Slides from a webcast put on by the Gerson Lehrman Group in February, 2013 on the Internet of Things. Travel with me on a half-hour journey through the thought leaders in the space, into the types of devices and networks that support them -- with a big finish about how the Internet of Things can improve the environment, our health, our communities and our lives.
Each year, memBrain LLC attends CES® to gather intelligence on hot new products and to identify emerging trends and industries.
This special edition of memBrain’s magazine, The STORM Report, is a compilation of memBrain’s observations from the CES® show floor combined with the most “buzzed about” products according to leading industry publications, industry insiders, and the CES® 2020 Innovation Award winners.
With thousands of new products vying for attention at CES®, it is easy to become overwhelmed. But the overarching trends and themes of the show offer an excellent window into what to expect in the near and not-too-distant future. In fact, it seemed as if the innovation on display this year was remarkably more focused on the present than on a future utopia, which was a departure from CES® events of the past.
While previous years felt like a showcase for moonshots and futuristic idealism, this year’s CES® was far more balanced between the practical and the fantastical. The consumer electronics industry is maturing - optimizing between commercialization, technological progress, and the next generation of disruptive products.
- The document discusses the evolution of the Internet of Things (IoT) from earlier concepts of pervasive and ubiquitous computing. It argues that IoT, combined with cloud computing, allows for pervasive computing applications and grids on a larger scale.
- A key point is that IoT will drive business innovation through new products, services, and revenue models based on outcomes rather than simple transactions. Over time, IoT technologies may "Uberize" many different industries.
- For companies, successfully adopting IoT requires navigating innovations dilemmas around exponential technology changes versus more gradual organizational changes. Both integrating IT and OT systems and building bridges between distributed devices and business applications are discussed as important challenges.
Presenting a) Mega Trends in the business world that affect small and medium-sized enterprises, b) the op ten technologies that promote creative disruption, and c) how to proceed in implementing some of them.
Kyiv ac admob-2015.-zhizn_it_v_cifrovuyu_eru_(tarun_sharma_bmc_software_india...Курьерская Служба Украины
Living IT in the Digital Era discusses how technology has advanced rapidly in recent decades. Mobile phone ownership has grown from 1 million users in 1990 to over 6 billion today. Humans now create more data in just two days than was created until 2003. No human has beaten a computer at chess since 2005. Every two minutes we now take as many photos as all of humanity did in the 1800s, with over 880 billion photos taken in 2014 alone. Business wants to build and protect their brand through amazing new services enabled by disruptive technologies like the internet of things, cloud computing, and robotics. The pace of disruption is faster than ever before, with innovations becoming superior and cheaper from day one in some cases. CIO priorities
The evolution of globalisation, economic value, IT, internet and mobile internet. Tipping point for mobile internet explained in new examples and trends in networks, hardware, applications, content and payment solutions. Focus on a new mobile internet concept called Emomapping, visualization of real-time emotions on maps for mobile
IoT and machine learning - Computational Intelligence conferenceAjit Jaokar
Slides for IoT and Machine learning talk. Sign up at Sign up at www.futuretext.com to get forthcoming copies of papers on IoT and Machine learning, Real time algorithms for IoT and Machine learning algorithms for Smart cities
Digital technologies have profoundly changed the ways we do business, buy, work and live. They have altered our society and continue impacting virtually all business functions and industries. It’s partially what digital business is about.
With BIG DATA, IoT, Security Intelligence, Neural Networks, Artificial Intelligence and Machine Learning it is very likely that in times to come we may have social media for machines.
Digital technologies that have intensely impacted our interaction with things and devices like never before can broadly be put under the three interrelated and interdepended domains.
1. Internet of Things (IoT)
2. Security Intelligence (Big Data)
3. Machine Learning
Internet of Things, BIG Data and Machine Learning offers tremendous potential and opportunities, however our ability to produce data is exceeding far by our ability of producing chips that can process the voluminous data streaming live (24X7) thereby creating a lot of DATA NOISE with less actionable insights. If we look at what happened during 9/11 in America, there were lots and lots of intercepts if reports were to be believed (DATA NOISE) but all that data could not lead to actionable collated information.
With Data explosion and emergence of DIGITAL ECOSYSTEM, Security is going to be a major concern.
That was my take on Digital Convergence.
(From Technology of Things to Analytics of things)
This document discusses the use of Robot Operating System 2 (ROS 2) and Data Distribution Service (DDS) for smart manufacturing. ROS 2 is an open-source robotics middleware that has gained popularity for use in mobile robots, industrial robots, and autonomous vehicles. It allows for distributed, decentralized control through the use of DDS as its underlying middleware for data distribution. The document outlines the history and releases of ROS 2, its advantages over a centralized ROS 1 architecture, and examples of its use in industrial applications such as multiple autonomous guided vehicles (AGVs) and 5G factory networks.
This document contains batch script commands to set environment variables for running an interactive face detection sample using models from the Intel computer vision SDK. It sets directories for the SDK deployment tools and models, checks for required files and paths, then runs the sample twice with different device and model options to perform face detection, age and gender recognition, and head pose estimation on image input.
Might Group is a technology company founded in 1986 that develops and manufactures wireless modules. It has expanded operations through establishing factories in China and Taiwan and an innovation hub in Taiwan. Might Group has many domestic and international customers for its wireless products, including startups it has supported through accelerators. One such startup customer was Ubiquiti Networks, whose founder went on to become one of the youngest billionaires after its successful IPO. The document also discusses lessons learned from the failed Kickstarter campaign of a startup customer named Zano, including risks of overestimating capabilities and underestimating costs when developing hardware products.
Explore the key differences between silicone sponge rubber and foam rubber in this comprehensive presentation. Learn about their unique properties, manufacturing processes, and applications across various industries. Discover how each material performs in terms of temperature resistance, chemical resistance, and cost-effectiveness. Gain insights from real-world case studies and make informed decisions for your projects.
23. IOT Economy
• Creative Collaborative Commons
• Longtail: from consumers to prosumer
• Personal Innovation is the Key
= New Lifestyle Economy
= Prosumer/Maker Economy