Edge Computing
Edge Computing
INTERNET OF THINGS
Contents
• Abstract
• Introduction
• Literature Survey
• Explanation of the paper
• Conclusion
• Learning outcomes
• References
Abstract
The proliferation of Internet of Things (IoT) and the success of rich
cloud services have pushed the horizon of a new computing paradigm, edge
computing, which calls for processing the data at the edge of the network. Edge
computing has the potential to address the concerns of response time
requirement, battery life constraint, bandwidth cost saving, as well as data
safety and privacy.we introduce the definition of edge computing, followed by
several case studies, ranging from cloud offloading to smart home and city, as
well as collaborative edge to materialize the concept of edge computing. Finally,
we present several challenges and Advantages in the field of edge computing.
Introduction
What is IoT?
The technological shift where just about anything you can think of is online and
communicating to other things and people in order to enable new services that
enhance our lives is known as Internet of Things (IoT).
• Self-driving drones delivering your grocery order
• Sensors in your clothing monitoring your health
Goal of IOT is to “connect the unconnected”.
Introduction
Introduction
Introduction
IoT Architecture Challenges in IoT
Security
Privacy
Interoperability
Over-the-air upgrades
Huge data volumes(Data-intensive)
Real-time actionable insights
complex event processing
Introduction
Introduction
What could be the
solution?
Edge/Fog computing
Introduction
What is Edge computing?
• Data is increasingly produced at the edge of the network, therefore, it would be more
efficient to also process the data at the edge of the network.
• Edge computing is a distributed, open IT architecture that features decentralized processing
power, enabling mobile computing and Internet of Things (IoT) technologies. In edge
computing, data is processed by the device itself or by a local computer or server, rather than
being transmitted to a data center.
• Moreover, bandwidth could also be saved if a larger portion of data could be handled at the edge rather than uploaded to
the cloud.
• The growth of IoT and the universalized mobile devices changed the role of edge in the computing paradigm from data
consumer to data producer/consumer.
• It would be more efficient to process or massage data at the edge of the network.
• we came up with our understanding of edge computing, with the rationale that computing should happen at the proximity
of data sources.
• Then we list several cases whereby edge computing could flourish from cloud offloading to a smart environment such as
home and city.
• We also introduce collaborative edge, since edge can connect end user and cloud both physically and logically so not only
is the conventional cloud computing paradigm still supported, but also it can connect long distance networks together for
data sharing and collaboration because of the closeness of data.
Learning outcome
• Helped me gain in-depth knowledge of this blooming field –Edge
computing and accordingly I would relate real-time applications.
• Provided the opportunity to participate in methods of scientific
analysis and research procedures.
• Improve oral and written communication skills.
• Apply principles of ethics and respect in interaction with others.
References
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2010.
2. S. Ghemawat, H. Gobioff, and S.-T. Leung, “The Google file system,” ACM SIGOPS Oper. Syst.
Rev., vol. 37, no. 5, pp. 29–43, 2003.
3. J. Dean and S. Ghemawat, “MapReduce: Simplified data processing on large clusters,”
Commun. ACM, vol. 51, no. 1, pp. 107–113, 2008.
4. K. Shvachko, H. Kuang, S. Radia, and R. Chansler, “The hadoop distributed file system,” in Proc.
IEEE 26th Symp. Mass Storage Syst. Technol. (MSST), Incline Village, NV, USA, 2010, pp. 1–10.
5. M. Zaharia, M. Chowdhury, M. J. Franklin, S. Shenker, and I. Stoica, “Spark: Cluster computing
with working sets,” in Proc. 2nd USENIX Conf. Hot Topics Cloud Comput., vol. 10. Boston, MA,
USA, 2010, p. 10.
6. K. Ashton, “That Internet of Things thing,” RFiD J., vol. 22, no. 7, pp. 97–114, 2009.
Thank you