Post by account_disabled on Dec 9, 2023 7:05:40 GMT
In the streets of a “Smart City”: Monitoring structural integrity of buildings, roads, bridges, etc. Mapping noise/pollution/signal strength etc. Smart Grid power, citywide lighting/heating solutions. Waste Management — smart tags for sorting, trash level/cleaning quality control. Virtual tours in real time. On “Smart Roads”, IoT can push messages to the driver, or to the automated vehicles: Traffic congestion analysis, with speed and direction tips. Smart Parking.
Vehicle Auto-diagnostics. In “Smart Homes”, controlled by an app running on the user’s smartphone and the home Smart TV: Power, heating, water use optimisation. Remote control appliances / Smart appliances that need minimal user involvement. Intrusion Email Marketing List detection / Smart locks. Outdoors in the “Smart Environment” seeded by rugged autonomous sensors: Flood, forest fire, avalanche, earthquake, contamination etc. early detection and real-time warning. In the field of “Smart Health” — at hospitals, care centres, worn as accessories/part of clothing: Fitness / Medical sensors, watching the body functions and capable of alerting a doctor in critical cases — if the wearer has a cardiac arrest, fall etc. “Homedoc” devices routinely performing the prescribed analyses. Medicine delivery systems (“smart pill bottle.
At the Enterprise level – in “smart” factories, stores, logistic depots etc. – IoT will change the way things are made, stored and moved, providing: Smart fabrication with customised product ordering. Supply chain control. Smart product / inventory management Quality of shipment conditions etc. There are virtually endless opportunities for the application of IoT. But while the technology opens many doors, it also brings with it almost as many security challenges, as a hacked vulnerability in one device can compromise other connected devices. In this way, IoT can expose companies all over the world to increased security threats – which means the apps we, as developers, create must be very carefully designed to minimise such risks.
Vehicle Auto-diagnostics. In “Smart Homes”, controlled by an app running on the user’s smartphone and the home Smart TV: Power, heating, water use optimisation. Remote control appliances / Smart appliances that need minimal user involvement. Intrusion Email Marketing List detection / Smart locks. Outdoors in the “Smart Environment” seeded by rugged autonomous sensors: Flood, forest fire, avalanche, earthquake, contamination etc. early detection and real-time warning. In the field of “Smart Health” — at hospitals, care centres, worn as accessories/part of clothing: Fitness / Medical sensors, watching the body functions and capable of alerting a doctor in critical cases — if the wearer has a cardiac arrest, fall etc. “Homedoc” devices routinely performing the prescribed analyses. Medicine delivery systems (“smart pill bottle.
At the Enterprise level – in “smart” factories, stores, logistic depots etc. – IoT will change the way things are made, stored and moved, providing: Smart fabrication with customised product ordering. Supply chain control. Smart product / inventory management Quality of shipment conditions etc. There are virtually endless opportunities for the application of IoT. But while the technology opens many doors, it also brings with it almost as many security challenges, as a hacked vulnerability in one device can compromise other connected devices. In this way, IoT can expose companies all over the world to increased security threats – which means the apps we, as developers, create must be very carefully designed to minimise such risks.