Iot Syllabus
Iot Syllabus
using built-in sensors to gather data and take action on that data across a network. So it's a building that uses
sensors to automatically adjust heating and lighting. Or production equipment alerting maintenance personnel to
an impending failure. Simply put, the Internet of Things is the future of technology that can make our lives more
efficient.
"Anything that can be connected will be connected." Say for example you are on your way to a meeting; your
car could have access to your calendar and already know the best route to take. The reality is that the IoT allows
for virtually endless opportunities and connections to take place, many of which we can't even think of or fully
understand the impact of today.
We've been fascinated with gadgets that function on a grander scale for decades (think spy movie-type stuff)
- but it's only been in the past several years that we've seen the IoT's true potential. The concept evolved as
wireless Internet became more pervasive, embedded sensors grew in sophistication and people began
understanding that technology could be a personal tool as well as a professional one. The term "Internet of
Things" was coined in the late 1990s by entrepreneur Kevin Ashton. Ashton, who's one of the founders of the
Auto-ID Center at MIT, was part of a team that discovered how to link objects to the Internet through an RFID
tag. He said he first used the phrase "Internet of Things" in a presentation he made in 1999 - and the term has
stuck around ever since.
Introduction to IOT
Benefits of IOT
Barriers of IOT
Case Study
IoT Architecture
Sensors
Communication Technology
Raspberry PI
Sensors, Demystified.
• Sensors specification
• How to use sensors.
• Types of sensors.
Integrating peripherals.
• Peripherals explanation.
• Understanding communication protocols
• Serial and parallel communication.
• UART, SPI, I2C communication.