Internet of Things - Company and Research Focus
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Rescooped by Richard Platt from Venture Capital Stories
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IoT mapped: The emerging landscape of smart things

IoT mapped: The emerging landscape of smart things | Internet of Things - Company and Research Focus | Scoop.it

No one really knows how many “things” there are deployed today that have IoT characteristics. IDC’s 2013 estimate was about 9.1 billion, growing to about 28 billion by 2020 and over 50 billion by 2025. You can get pretty much any other number you want, but all the estimates are very large. So what are all these IoT things doing and why are they there? Here’s our attempt to map out the IoT landscape (click to enlarge). Read more: click image or title.



Via Marc Kneepkens
Richard Platt's insight:

As you can see, there are a whole lot of possible organizational approaches to the constituent parts of IoT. We have chosen a “halo” approach, looking at how IoT principles will be applied to individual people, their surroundings (vehicles and homes), the organization of those surroundings (towns and cities and the highways and other transit systems that connect them), the range of social activities (essentially commerce, but also travel, hospitality, entertainment and leisure) that go on in those surroundings and finally the underpinnings of those activities (“industrial” including agriculture, energy and transport and logistics). We’re not claiming this is an exhaustive taxonomy (we’ve excluded all military and some law enforcement specific uses) or that this is the best way to organize things, but we think it’s a useful start and has been helpful in explaining the opportunity to the businesses we advise.   The size of the circles aren’t important. They’re basically an indication of how far away from the individual each collection of potential IoT ideas will be implemented, but even that isn’t fully consistent – there will be interactions between people and IoT ideas in the workplace as well as in the home or in the store.

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Rescooped by Richard Platt from Technology and Gadgets
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[CES 2014] SanDisk Ups The Capacity On Its Wireless USB Flash Drive To 64GB, Makes It Available Immediately For $99.99

[CES 2014] SanDisk Ups The Capacity On Its Wireless USB Flash Drive To 64GB, Makes It Available Immediately For $99.99 | Internet of Things - Company and Research Focus | Scoop.it
SanDisk's wireless flash drives offer a solution to a growing problem: the increasing absence of expandable memory options in the latest high-end phones. U... by Bertel King, Jr. in News

Via Tiaan Jonker
Richard Platt's insight:

This is just one example of the necessity of SSHD to increase density (in this case for mobile phones), but we would also argue that the same is true for all other places that you'd find SSHD (laptops, servers, etc...)

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