The state of IoT Device 2019

August 12, 2019

IoT devices, or any of the many things in the internet of things, are nonstandard computing devices that connect wirelessly to a network and have the ability to transmit data.

Spotlight

MQTT

MQTT stands for MQ Telemetry Transport. It is a publish/subscribe, extremely simple and lightweight messaging protocol, designed for constrained devices and low-bandwidth, high-latency or unreliable networks. The design principles are to minimise network bandwidth and device resource requirements whilst also attempting to ensure reliability and some degree of assurance of delivery. These principles also turn out to make the protocol ideal of the emerging “machine-to-machine” (M2M) or “Internet of Things” world of connected devices, and for mobile applications where bandwidth and battery power are at a premium.

Other Infographics
news image

Industry 4.0 - Smart Factories for a Smarter Future

Infographic | May 9, 2021

According to Netscribes research, the global smart factory or Industrial 4.0 market is expected to grow at a CAGR of 10.4% and will reach USD 74.80 billion by 2020. Over the past few decades, the manufacturing industry has gone through tremendous change. The traditional automation has been transformed to complete automation with the emergence of IoT which includes the convergence of Industrial Internet of Things (IIoT), artificial intelligence, robotics, cloud computing, augmented reality, and big data. The emergence of Industry4.0 or IIoT (Industrial IoT) will help manufacturers to meet the dynamic needs of the consumer market by integrating the supply chain, production line, and quality control.

Read More
news image

Secure Elements deliver scalable trust for IoT applications

Infographic | January 20, 2020

Secure Elements are a standard technlogy that integrate new GSMA specifications, IoT SAFE initiative providing an interoperable and scalable security framework. Mutual trust between the cloud and IoT devices is built on the Transport Layer Security (TLS) handshake protocol

Read More
news image

WHAT IS IOT?

Infographic | December 1, 2019

Data streams flow nonstop from IoT devices. Businesses should know where to collect all this big data, what to keep versus discard, and how to use it. That's where IoT analytics can help. Analytics reveals meaningful patterns in the data, in real time or after the data is stored in a data center or the cloud.

Read More
news image

The Internet of Things (IoT) in a Smart Building

Infographic | December 1, 2019

The definition of what these ‘things’ are can be fuzzy and is constantly evolving. The IoT also overlaps with previous concepts like computing, wireless sensor networks and cyber-physical systems. Below is an illustration of IoT devices found within a typical smart building network and how these systems communicate with one another.

Read More
news image

What is exactly Internet of thing?

Infographic | December 11, 2019

Smart Systems and the Internet of Things are driven by a combination of we are giving our world a digital nervous system. Location data using GPS sensors. Eyes and ears using cameras and microphones, along with sensory organs that can measure everything from temperature to pressure changes.

Read More
news image

State of Enterprise IoT Security in North America: Unmanaged And Unsecured

Infographic | December 5, 2019

How enterprises are struggling to identify, monitor and secure unmanaged and IoT devices in their business. Then only are you able to make some smart decisions about what you should and shouldn't allow the device to do, apply policy to that, and make it more intelligent.

Read More

Spotlight

MQTT

MQTT stands for MQ Telemetry Transport. It is a publish/subscribe, extremely simple and lightweight messaging protocol, designed for constrained devices and low-bandwidth, high-latency or unreliable networks. The design principles are to minimise network bandwidth and device resource requirements whilst also attempting to ensure reliability and some degree of assurance of delivery. These principles also turn out to make the protocol ideal of the emerging “machine-to-machine” (M2M) or “Internet of Things” world of connected devices, and for mobile applications where bandwidth and battery power are at a premium.

Events