Shortcuts
 
PageMenu- Hauptmenü-
Page content

Kategorienanzeige

MAB

Architecting the Internet of Things
Kategorie Beschreibung
036aXA-DE
037beng
077a341075752 Buchausg. u.d.T.: ‡Architecting the Internet of Things
087q978-3-642-19156-5
100 Uckelmann, Dieter
104bHarrison, Mark
108bMichahelles, Florian
331 Architecting the Internet of Things
410 Berlin, Heidelberg
412 Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg
425 2011
425a2011
433 Online-Ressource (XXXI, 351p. 77 illus, digital)
451bSpringerLink. Bücher
501 Includes bibliographical references and index
517 Architecting the Internet of Things; Foreword; Contents; Figures; Tables; Abbreviations; 1 An Architectural Approach Towards the Future Internet of Things; 1.1 Introduction, Background and Initial Visions; 1.2 Definitions and Functional Requirements; 1.3 A European Perspective on Funded Projects, Technologies and State of the Art in Relation to the Internet of Things; 1.4 Opportunities and Motivation; 1.5 Outlook to Future Developments; 1.6 A Possible Architecture for the Future Internet of Things; 1.7 Conclusion and Outlook; References. 2 About the "Idea of Man" in System Design - An Enlightened Version of the Internet of Things?2.1 Introduction; 2.2 About the Idea of Man: Definition and Relation to System Design; 2.3 The Idea of Man as Opposed to the Nature of a Computer System; 2.4 Social Interaction and Norms at the Human/Machine Interface; 2.5 The Impact of the Programmer's Idea of Man; 2.6 The Idea of Man: Steps and Challenges for its Recognition in System Design; 2.7 Conclusion; References; 3 Enabling the Masses to Become Creative in Smart Spaces; 3.1 The Meaning of DiY in the Network Society. 3.1.1 DiY as Socio-Cultural Practice3.1.1.1 DiY is About Connecting; 3.1.1.2 DiY is About Taking Control; 3.1.1.3 DiY is About Diversification; 3.1.2 DiY in Software Application Creation; 3.1.3 DiY in Smart Spaces; 3.2 Research Orientation towards Tangible Creation in Smart Spaces; 3.3 Candidate Enabling Concept 1: The Call-out Internet of Things; 3.3.1 Location-Based Call-Outs; 3.3.2 Tag-Based Call-Outs; 3.3.3 Image-Based Call-Outs; 3.3.4 The Future of Call-Outs; 3.4 Candidate Enabling Concept 2: The Smart Composables Internet of Things. 3.4.1 Object Classification According to Creator and Purpose3.4.2 Grounding via Experimentation; 3.5 Candidate Enabling Concept 3: The Phenomena Internet of Things; 3.5.1 Ingredients of the Phenomena Internet of Things; 3.5.1.1 Ingredient 1: Massive Data Collection; 3.5.1.2 Ingredient 2: User Inspection and Appreciation Feedback; 3.5.1.3 Ingredient 3: Relevancy Improvement from Iteration on Captured Feedback; 3.5.1.4 Ingredient 4: Fuelling User-generated Applications with Phenomena; 3.5.2 Links to Current and Historical State-of-the-Art; 3.5.3 Potential Application Domains. 3.5.3.1 Home Applications Aware of Personal Context3.5.3.2 Massive City Data for 'Optimal' Traffic Behaviour; 3.5.4 Grounding via Experimentation; 3.6 Conclusion; Acknowlegements; References; 4 The Toolkit Approach for End-user Participation in the Internet of Things; 4.1 From Internet to Internet of Things; 4.2 Problems and Challenges; 4.3 Towards a Participatory Approach; 4.3.1 User-centered Design; 4.3.1.1 User-centered Principles and Activities; 4.3.1.2 Participatory Design; 4.3.2 Open-source Development; 4.3.3 End-user Programming; 4.3.4 Crowdsourcing; 4.3.5 Living Labs. 4.4 Innovations to Users via Toolkits
527 Buchausg. u.d.T.: ‡Architecting the Internet of Things
540aISBN 978-3-642-19157-2
700 |TBC
700 |KJMV
700 |TEC000000
700b|658.5
700b|004.678
700c|TA177.4-185
700g127111898X ST 302
700g1270945718 ST 610
700g1272318923 ST 520
700g1270877550 ST 200
750 Many of the initial developments towards the Internet of Things have focused on the combination of Auto-ID and networked infrastructures in business-to-business logistics and product lifecycle applications. However, the Internet of Things is more than a business tool for managing business processes more efficiently and more effectively - it will also enable a more convenient way of life.Since the term Internet of Things first came to attention when the Auto-ID Center launched their initial vision for the EPC network for automatically identifying and tracing the flow of goods within supply-chains, increasing numbers of researchers and practitioners have further developed this vision. The authors in this book provide a research perspective on current and future developments in the Internet of Things. The different chapters cover a broad range of topics from system design aspects and core architectural approaches to end-user participation, business perspectives and applications.
902s 209017090 Logistik
902s 327984538 Internet der Dinge
902s 213179423 RFID
012 343190400
081 Uckelmann, Dieter: Architecting the Internet of Things
100 Springer E-Book
125aElektronischer Volltext - Campuslizenz
655e$uhttp://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-19157-2
Schnellsuche