The aim of this book is to stimulate research on the topic of the Social Internet of Things, and explore how Internet of Things architectures, tools, and services can be conceptualized and developed so as to reveal, amplify and inspire the capacities of people, including the socialization or collaborations that happen through or around smart objects and smart environments. From new ways of negotiating privacy, to the consequences of increased automation, the Internet of Things poses new challenges and opens up new questions that often go beyond the technology itself, and rather focus on how the technology will become embedded in our future communities, families, practices, and environment, and how these will change in turn.
Intro -- Preface -- References -- Acknowledgements -- Contents -- Contributors -- Part I Social IoT Vision -- Beautifying IoT: The Internet of Things as a Cultural Agenda -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Methodology: Speculatively Contributing to IT Research Agendas -- 2.1 Policy and Beauty in Taiwan -- 2.2 Design Criticism -- 2.3 Thinking with Theory: Philosophy of Art and Beauty -- 3 Design Criticism: Two Cases -- 3.1 LASS: From Environmental Sensing to Lasting Aesthetic Experiences -- 3.2 No.30: From Industrial to Aesthetic Material -- 4 Discussion -- 5 Conclusion -- References -- The Internet of Places -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Things and Places -- 3 Jack's Kitchen -- 4 Past, Present and Future Cohabitation -- 5 Sociotechnical Change -- References -- From the Internet of Things to an Internet of Practices -- 1 Introduction: Learning Technology Practices -- 2 Theoretical Framing -- 2.1 The Concept of Practices -- 2.2 Internet of Things -- 2.3 Infrastructuring and Sociable Technologies -- 2.4 Resonance Activities -- 3 The Internet of Practices -- 4 Conclusion -- References -- Part II Social IoT Interaction Design -- The Needfinding Machine -- 1 Introduction -- 2 What Is a Needfinding Machine -- 2.1 Considerations for Needfinding Machines -- 3 What Is in a Needfinding Machine -- 3.1 Observe -- 3.2 Ask -- 3.3 Perform -- 3.4 Document -- 3.5 Display -- 3.6 Control -- 4 Why Needfinding Machines -- 5 Related Methods -- 5.1 Ethnography -- 5.2 Things as Co-ethnographers -- 5.3 Remote Usability Testing -- 5.4 Data-Driven Design Validation -- 5.5 Experience Sampling in the Wild -- 5.6 Probes -- 5.7 Wizard-of-Oz -- 5.8 Conversational Agents -- 6 Case Study: DJ Bot -- 6.1 Design Motivation -- 6.2 Music on the Road-A First Context -- 6.3 Implementation -- 6.4 On-Road Sessions -- 7 Discussion -- 7.1 Designing By, With and for Data.
Zugriffsoptionen:
Die folgenden Links führen aus den jeweiligen lokalen Bibliotheken zum Volltext:
We turn on the lights in our house from a desk in an office miles away. Our refrigerator alerts us to buy milk on the way home. A package of cookies on the supermarket shelf suggests that we buy it, based on past purchases. The cookies themselves are on the shelf because of a "smart" supply chain. When we get home, the thermostat has already adjusted the temperature so that it's toasty or bracing, whichever we prefer. This is the Internet of Things -- a networked world of connected devices, objects, and people. In this book, Samuel Greengard offers a guided tour through this emerging world and how it will change the way we live and work.Greengard explains that the Internet of Things (IoT) is still in its early stages. Smart phones, cloud computing, RFID (radio-frequency identification) technology, sensors, and miniaturization are converging to make possible a new generation of embedded and immersive technology. Greengard traces the origins of the IoT from the early days of personal computers and the Internet and examines how it creates the conceptual and practical framework for a connected world. He explores the industrial Internet and machine-to-machine communication, the basis for smart manufacturing and end-to-end supply chain visibility; the growing array of smart consumer devices and services -- from Fitbit fitness wristbands to mobile apps for banking; the practical and technical challenges of building the IoT; and the risks of a connected world, including a widening digital divide and threats to privacy and security. Finally, he considers the long-term impact of the IoT on society, narrating an eye-opening "Day in the Life" of IoT connections circa 2025.
Zugriffsoptionen:
Die folgenden Links führen aus den jeweiligen lokalen Bibliotheken zum Volltext:
In: New media & society: an international and interdisciplinary forum for the examination of the social dynamics of media and information change, Band 20, Heft 8, S. 3091-3092
In: New media & society: an international and interdisciplinary forum for the examination of the social dynamics of media and information change, Band 18, Heft 4, S. 680-682
The Internet of Things (IoT) defines a highly interconnected network of heterogeneous devices where all kinds of communications seem to be possible, even unauthorized ones. As a result, the security requirement for such network becomes critical whilst common standard Internet security protocols are recognized as unusable in this type of networks, particularly due to some classes of IoT devices with constrained resources. Due to the limitations of energy, computation and storage for sensors, although IoT have been widely deployed in many applications such as military, ecological and health-related areas. It is a critical challenge to present the effective and lightweight security protocol to prevent various attacks for IoT, especially for the denial of service (DoS) attack. Normally, the adversaries compromise sensors and launch the DoS attack by replaying redundant messages or making overdose of fake messages. In this paper, we explore the scope of the DoS attack problem in IoT. First we outline the constraints, security requirements, and then explore types of DoS attacks in IoT.
В тази статия е направен опит да се представи технологията "Интернет на нещата" и нейните възможности за приложение в сферата на образованието. Описани са фазите на глобализация и индустриалните революции, в хода на които възникват различни технологии, които обуславят и съпътстват живота във всички негови контексти. Независимо че няма общоприета дефиниция на понятието "Интернет на нещата", в статията е направен опит понятието да бъде определено. В цивилизационен план, тази технология има потенциал за решаване на някои от глобалните проблеми на модерния свят – екологични, глада, здравето и дълголетието на населението, качеството на живот на хората.