High Performance Data Architectures for the Internet of Things (IoT)

Over 30 billion devices will be wirelessly connected to the Internet by 2020. Internet of Things (IoT) applications have three key components: the devices, the networks connecting them, and the analytics that use the generated data. Before data is valuable, it must be converted to actionable information through complex processing and correlation algorithms. As the number of devices increases, so does the volume of data, giving rise to scaling challenges. In-memory data fabrics such as Apache® Ignite™ address the scaling and real-time processing requirements of IoT use cases.
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Spotlight

OTHER ON-DEMAND WEBINARS

Common Attacks on IoT Devices

The Linux Foundation

The importance of securing embedded devices has become clear to the whole industry as they started to play a bigger role in our daily lives in recent years. Up to now, it has been easy to compromise IoT devices such as vacuum robot, IP cameras, smart home devices, etc.
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Why IoT projects fail, and what to do about them

The IoT (Internet of Things) is a rapidly developing market where devices that can create data are connected via the Internet to servers where that data can be processed, distributed and used. In spite of this success, there are increasing instances of IoT project failures.
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The importance of telematics in an IoT world

Gigaom

This 1-hour webinar will discuss the importance of the telematics in the insurance industry. The insurance industry is experiencing disruptive forces from several directions. At the same time, competition is heating up and creating pressure in ways not previously seen. Telematics provides an innovative way for insurance companies to change the value proposition for their business and customers.
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Mobile Device Trends in the Internet of Things

Event 24

In the Internet of Things, there's no such thing as a mobile device that operates in isolation. And yet, mobile devices and apps are often marketed, sold, and bought as if they're independent products. Manufacturers and consumers alike need to think less in terms of "discrete product" and more of "interconnected systems." No one wants 50 different mobile apps to control 50 different things in their smart home or smart health environments. With IoT product manufacturers championing different communications protocols, the challenge is to enable one mobile app to control many devices.
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