BY srikanth.naidu5 Dec 2024 Edit
Internet of Things

The Internet of Things (IoT) is a network of interconnected physical objects that use sensors, software, and other technologies.

Interconnected computing devices, mechanical and digital equipment, objects, animals, or people having unique identities (UIDs) and the capacity to send data over a network without the need for human-to-human or human-to-computer communication.

Any device that can be assigned an IP address and can transport data over a network, such as a heart monitor implant, a farm animal with a biochip transponder, a car with integrated sensors to notify the driver when tyre pressure is low, or any device that can be assigned an IP address and can transport data over a network, are examples of internet of things objects.

IoT Developed from machine-to-machine (M2M) communication, which involves machines communicating with one another across a network without having to interact in real time. Connecting a gadget to the cloud, administering it, and collecting data is referred to as machine to machine communication.

History

In 1982, a customised Coca-Cola vending machine at Carnegie Mellon University launched the Internet of Things concept.

How it works?

IoT devices acquire data by interacting with their surroundings in the real world, and this data is then saved on the cloud.

By connecting to an IoT gateway or other edge device, IoT devices may exchange sensor data that is either transmitted to the cloud for analysis or processed locally.

IoT devices may be interacted with using applications on various devices, such as smartphones.

Applications

Consumer, commercial, industrial, and infrastructural IoT devices are frequently separated.

image

Frameworks

IoT frameworks include the following:

Amazon Web Services (AWS) IoT is an Amazon cloud computing platform for IoT. This framework is intended to make it simple and safe for smart devices to connect to the AWS cloud and other connected devices.

The Azure IoT Suite from Microsoft is a platform that consists of a set of services that allow customers to connect with and receive data from their IoT devices, as well as execute different data operations such as multidimensional analysis.

Brillo/Weave, developed by Google, is a platform for developing IoT applications quickly.

Calvin is an Ericsson-developed open source IoT platform for developing and administering distributed applications that allow devices to communicate with one another.

BY srikanth.naidu
LikeCommentSave
LikeCommentSaveShare
0
Categories
General
YantraJS
Developer Guides
Tutorials
Web Atoms Updates

POPULAR POSTS
17 Mar 2021
LATEST ACTIVITY
Simmi Kava
commented this post.
Simmi Kava
liked this post.
Show more
ARCHIVES
2025
2024
2023
2022
TAGS
javascript (56)
developer (25)
javascriptdeveloper (16)
Xamarin.Forms (16)
Html (14)
typescript (12)
webatoms (12)
xamarin (11)
coding (10)
web-atoms (10)
arrays (9)
android (8)
javascript-developer (8)
csharp (7)
dotnet (7)
css (6)
update (6)
dotnet-standard (5)
function (5)
iOS (5)
methods (4)




Web Atoms: JSX (TSX + TypeScript) for Xamarin.Forms, Hot Reload Your App in Production Environment

PlaygroundSamples Repository