The "Internet of Things (IoT)" disrupts with the today's Internet limitations of human-entered data: technologies like RFID, short-range wireless communications, real-time localization, and sensor networks empower computers to perceive the world for themselves. Standardized infrastructures capable of managing, sharing and processing this captured data will be necessary in order to bring the Internet of Things into commercial use.
This interlinking of physical world and cyberspace foreshadows an exciting endeavour that is highly relevant to researchers, corporations, and individuals.
This conference will continue the success of the Internet of Things conference from 2008 in Zurich. It brings internationally leading researchers and practitioners from both academia and industry together to facilitate sharing of applications, research results, and knowledge. The IoT2010 particularly encourages research on infrastructure and applications facilitating environmentaly responsibility under a theme "IoT for a Green Planet".
The three-day event will feature keynotes from industrial and academic visionaries, technical presentations of cutting-edge research, reports on the user-experience from seasoned practitioners, panel discussions on hot topics, poster sessions summarizing late-breaking results, and hands-on demos of current technology.
Be sure to mark your calendars if you want to know more about:
* Green by Internet of Things / Green of Internet of Things Technology
* Design of future sustainable technologies linking the physical and virtual world
* Novel services and applications to facilitate environmental responsibility
* Emerging Internet of Things business models and process changes
* Communication systems and network architectures for the IoT
* Experience reports from the introduction and operation of networked things in areas such as healthcare, logistics & transport
* Emerging applications and interaction paradigms for everyday citizens
* Social impacts and consequences, such as security, privacy, opportunities and risks
Important dates
Paper submission due: March 15, 2010
Workshop proposal due: March 20, 2010
Scientific contributions are expected to be published in the Springer LNCS series.
We are particularly interested in work addressing real-world implementation and deployment issues.
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I'm an enemy of what I call 'computer theology.' There's a class conflict out there. There's a techno-elite that lives in a different world.
-- Walter Mossberg
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Eva Hornecker explains the evolving concept of Tangible Interaction.
Read Eva's insightful entry here..