Rethinking the Internet of Things : a scalable approach to connecting everything /

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Bibliographic Details
Author / Creator:DaCosta, Francis.
Imprint:[New York, N.Y.] : ApressOpen, c2013.
Description:1 online resource (1 v.) : ill.
Language:English
Series:The expert's voice in Internet technologies
Expert's voice in Internet technologies.
Subject:
Format: E-Resource Book
URL for this record:http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/9982680
Hidden Bibliographic Details
Varying Form of Title:Scalable approach to connecting everything
ISBN:9781430257400
1430257407
9781430257417 (electronic)
1430257415 (electronic)
Notes:Includes index.
Description based on online resource; title from title page (Safari, viewed Jan. 24, 2014).
Summary:Over the next decade, most devices connected to the Internet will not be used by people in the familiar way that personal computers, tablets and smart phones are. Billions of interconnected devices will be monitoring the environment, transportation systems, factories, farms, forests, utilities, soil and weather conditions, oceans and resources. Many of these sensors and actuators will be networked into autonomous sets, with much of the information being exchanged machine-to-machine directly and without human involvement. Machine-to-machine communications are typically terse. Most sensors and actuators will report or act upon small pieces of information - 'chirps'. Burdening these devices with current network protocol stacks is inefficient, unnecessary and unduly increases their cost of ownership. This must change. The architecture of theInternet of Things must evolve now byincorporating simpler protocols toward at the edges of thenetwork, or remain forever inefficient. Rethinking the Internet of Things describes reasons why we must rethink current approaches to the Internet of Things. Appropriate architectures that will coexist with existing networking protocols are described in detail. An architecture comprised of integrator functions, propagator nodes, and end devices, along with their interactions, is explored.