June 21-23, 2023 | USA
SSCt2023 is the International Conference on Sustainable Smart Cities and Territories, an open symposium which brings together researchers and developers from academia and industry to present and discuss the latest scientific and technical advances in the fields of Smart Cities and Smart Territories. It will promote an environment for discussion on how techniques, methods, and tools help system designers to accomplish the transition from the current cities towards those we need in a changing world. Brand new ideas will be greatly appreciated as well as relevant revisions and actualizations of previously presented work, project summaries and PhD thesis. The SSCt2023 program will include keynote addresses, a main technical track, a workshop program and doctoral consortium.
April 20, 2023 | UK
This gathering of over 1000 senior management from sectors such as energy & infrastructure, manufacturing, retail, automotive, healthcare, smart buildings, transport will offer a unique opportunity to meet with suppliers and keep up-to-date with the latest industry innovations, best practice and new technology solutions in IOT and Industry 4.0
June 19-22, 2023 | Germany
IoT Week 2023 continues to explore the latest digital technologies and trends shaping societies and businesses toward the creation of sustainable, data-driven global economies. Berlin will host industry and academic experts from around the world to share best practice examples and jointly explore challenges and barriers that the research and innovation ecosystem has to address on the path toward the achievement of the UN Sustainable Development Goals.
June 12, 2023 | USA
Device-free wireless sensing has recently attracted a lot of attention thanks to its non-intrusive and sensor-free nature. Contrary to the traditional sensor-based and wearable sensing, wireless sensing does not need any sensors but leverages the signal distortions and machine learning algorithms for sensing. Moreover, wireless signals can propagate through walls which allows sensing to be performed even in non-line-of sight (NLOS) scenarios which increases the sensing coverage over camera-based systems. Different types of wireless signals have been employed for sensing including WiFi, RFID, mmWave, UWB, and acoustic signals. As wireless signals bounce off of physical objects within the environment such as static objects like walls or furniture as well as any humans in the environment, their characteristics (e.g., amplitude, phase) change uniquely. This then provides an opportunity to sense the environment and obtain contextual information (e.g., recognizing the motion) through a fine-grained analysis of signal variations. Wireless sensing has been considered in various applications including but not limited to localization, human activity and gesture recognition, gait estimation, fall detection, respiration monitoring and crowd counting.