Liberating the Black Box - Real-Time Communications for the Internet of ThingsPeter Moskovits
Commercial aviation’s biggest challenge when things go wrong is that flight data is stuck on the plane inside the black box. Until the black box is recovered, we barely know anything about what went wrong. This presentation offers detailed insights how IoT and modern Web communications concepts have the power to change all this. I you’re a maker, you will learn about flight sensors attached and controlled by Arduino, data transmitted over long range WiFi as well as satellite networks. If interested in real-time Web communications, you’ll learn about a highly secure and scalable WebSocket implementation with extreme scale, publishing flight data to tablets and laptops used as monitoring dashboard. Regardless of your background, you’ll have fun. Guaranteed!
Connecting Physical Devices to the Web - Event Driven Architecture using WebS...Peter Moskovits
Before the Web, clients connected to back-end servers without compromises. As the Web came along with HTTP, we had to give up some of the power of our connectivity. With the evolving open Web communications standards, now we have a unique opportunity to move on from a request-response based REST world to a true, event-driven architecture. Learn what it takes to connect physical devices, such as Arduino and the Rasberry Pi to collect sensor data, or control physical devices over the Web.
Commercial aviation's biggest challenge when things go wrong is that flight data is stuck on the plane inside the black box. Until the black box is recovered, we barely know anything about what went wrong. This presentation offers detailed insights into how IoT and modern Web communications concepts have the power to change all this.
If you're a maker, you will learn about "flight sensors" attached and controlled by Arduino, data transmitted over long range WiFi as well as satellite networks. If interested in real-time Web communications, you'll learn about a highly secure WebSocket implementation with extreme scale, publishing flight data to tablets and laptops used as monitoring dashboard. If protocol layering, enterprise messaging, or JMS is your thing, this talk is for you.
Code samples and plenty of interactive live demos (with Things) add color to the talk.
Extending JMS to Web Devices over HTML5 WebSockets - JavaOne 2011Peter Moskovits
HTML5 WebSockets offers secure, high-performance, bidirectional network communication over the Web and in the cloud, making applications more responsive while using less bandwidth: live dashboards, financial quotes and transactions, real-time auctions and betting, gaming, equipment monitoring . . . the list is endless. In this session, see how to extend the Java Message Service (JMS) API to Web devices over HTML5 WebSockets to enrich and accelerate your applications. Discover through concrete code examples and a live customer application how to develop highly interactive UIs showing real-time data from any middleware supporting JMS, such as Tibco EMS or Informatica UMQ. Demos include JavaFX and JavaScript running in a Web browser and on a mobile device.
Liberating the Black Box - Real-Time Communications for the Internet of ThingsPeter Moskovits
Commercial aviation’s biggest challenge when things go wrong is that flight data is stuck on the plane inside the black box. Until the black box is recovered, we barely know anything about what went wrong. This presentation offers detailed insights how IoT and modern Web communications concepts have the power to change all this. I you’re a maker, you will learn about flight sensors attached and controlled by Arduino, data transmitted over long range WiFi as well as satellite networks. If interested in real-time Web communications, you’ll learn about a highly secure and scalable WebSocket implementation with extreme scale, publishing flight data to tablets and laptops used as monitoring dashboard. Regardless of your background, you’ll have fun. Guaranteed!
Connecting Physical Devices to the Web - Event Driven Architecture using WebS...Peter Moskovits
Before the Web, clients connected to back-end servers without compromises. As the Web came along with HTTP, we had to give up some of the power of our connectivity. With the evolving open Web communications standards, now we have a unique opportunity to move on from a request-response based REST world to a true, event-driven architecture. Learn what it takes to connect physical devices, such as Arduino and the Rasberry Pi to collect sensor data, or control physical devices over the Web.
Commercial aviation's biggest challenge when things go wrong is that flight data is stuck on the plane inside the black box. Until the black box is recovered, we barely know anything about what went wrong. This presentation offers detailed insights into how IoT and modern Web communications concepts have the power to change all this.
If you're a maker, you will learn about "flight sensors" attached and controlled by Arduino, data transmitted over long range WiFi as well as satellite networks. If interested in real-time Web communications, you'll learn about a highly secure WebSocket implementation with extreme scale, publishing flight data to tablets and laptops used as monitoring dashboard. If protocol layering, enterprise messaging, or JMS is your thing, this talk is for you.
Code samples and plenty of interactive live demos (with Things) add color to the talk.
Extending JMS to Web Devices over HTML5 WebSockets - JavaOne 2011Peter Moskovits
HTML5 WebSockets offers secure, high-performance, bidirectional network communication over the Web and in the cloud, making applications more responsive while using less bandwidth: live dashboards, financial quotes and transactions, real-time auctions and betting, gaming, equipment monitoring . . . the list is endless. In this session, see how to extend the Java Message Service (JMS) API to Web devices over HTML5 WebSockets to enrich and accelerate your applications. Discover through concrete code examples and a live customer application how to develop highly interactive UIs showing real-time data from any middleware supporting JMS, such as Tibco EMS or Informatica UMQ. Demos include JavaFX and JavaScript running in a Web browser and on a mobile device.
JMS, WebSocket, and the Internet of Things - Controlling Physical Devices on ...Peter Moskovits
JMS is widely used behind enterprise firewalls to build loosely coupled distributed systems. This session discusses how JMS can be extended and applied to an always connected Web and mobile environment to provide interactivity and collaboration by controlling physical objects, such as model cars, remotely. You’ll learn how you can connect an HTML5 client running on the Web browser of a smartphone and Java running on a Raspberry Pi, a credit-card-size computer, in real time, using open industry-standard Web technologies. The presentation features several live demonstrations of the concepts discussed throughout the session.
Presentation given by David Witherspoon and Prashant Khanal on Sep 25, 2013 at JavaOne in San Francisco.
HTML5 WebSocket for the Real-Time Weband the Internet of ThingsPeter Moskovits
Abstract: In his talk Peter gives a brief introduction to WebSocket and discusses how real-time Web communications technologies can be applied to an always connected Web and mobile world. Then, he walks you through how to provide interactivity and collaboration by controlling physical objects remotely. The presentation features several live demonstrations of the concepts discussed throughout the session.
JMS, WebSocket, and the Internet of Things - Controlling Physical Devices on ...Peter Moskovits
JMS is widely used behind enterprise firewalls to build loosely coupled distributed systems. This session discusses how JMS can be extended and applied to an always connected Web and mobile environment to provide interactivity and collaboration by controlling physical objects, such as model cars, remotely. You’ll learn how you can connect an HTML5 client running on the Web browser of a smartphone and Java running on a Raspberry Pi, a credit-card-size computer, in real time, using open industry-standard Web technologies. The presentation features several live demonstrations of the concepts discussed throughout the session.
Presentation given by David Witherspoon and Prashant Khanal on Sep 25, 2013 at JavaOne in San Francisco.
HTML5 WebSocket for the Real-Time Weband the Internet of ThingsPeter Moskovits
Abstract: In his talk Peter gives a brief introduction to WebSocket and discusses how real-time Web communications technologies can be applied to an always connected Web and mobile world. Then, he walks you through how to provide interactivity and collaboration by controlling physical objects remotely. The presentation features several live demonstrations of the concepts discussed throughout the session.