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  • So, the Internet of Things

  • Who loves the Internet?

  • If you didn't put your hand up, get out.

  • If you haven't used Google at work to do your job better, then you are wrong.

  • And who loves things?

  • The chairs you are sitting in

  • the glasses you are wearing, friends you hold

  • pretty much everyone,

  • some weird people down here.

  • Well, the Internet of Things

  • there's a lot to it.

  • I'm gonna try to breeze through this in 7 minutes

  • But let's jump into it.

  • Let's jump into what Internet of Things, IoT really is.

  • Now in the digital world, we can make everything talk to each other.

  • We can make our phones talk to each other

  • We can make Facebook talk to each other

  • And in the physical world, not so much.

  • This is where our lives and technological development kind of stopped.

  • But now, we are able to build a network

  • so, multiple of physical objects

  • your chair, your table, your lounge

  • those tim tams in the fridge

  • they are connected to the Internet.

  • If you don't know what the Internet is you same weird people who said no, get out

  • It allows you to send

  • so you can create and transmit

  • receive, so that you can receive and interpret

  • and exchange data

  • exchange data, you can have conversations with things around you

  • so IoT will allow multiple physical objects, like the tim tams

  • to be connected to the Internet

  • They can send just how good tim tams are

  • to other tim tams and to you.

  • And they can receive just how many people want those damn tim tams.

  • And they can have a conversation with other items in your fridge.

  • So we are entering a very exciting time

  • where we will have chairs, couches

  • pretty much everything that's in your home connected to the Internet

  • or at least have conversations with things around you.

  • Now, still very ominous right?

  • even though we have a definition that I may or may not

  • have gotten off urban dictionary

  • But, let's break it into four sections.

  • Hardware

  • Little bits and pieces like this.

  • The hardware is what actually allows us to connect digital items to physical objects.

  • So I can put this on a door

  • and it will tell me when the door opens

  • This is a dollar by the way, a dollar.

  • So we have hardware that senses things.

  • We have data.

  • Data actually starts

  • to make sense of what all this is.

  • It's things we push around all the time

  • everyday we don't really think about.

  • But for example,

  • this piece of hardware here

  • creates ECG data.

  • It tells me how fast my heart is beating.

  • Let's actually check that out right now.

  • Yeah, okay, 110, great.

  • Essentially this has also changed over the last 10 years.

  • We used to push data around

  • in heavy, kinda standardized format.

  • We're seeing a lot of different ways of doing this now

  • We see JSON strings.

  • Let's see you interpret that, Marky.

  • J-S-O-N, yeah

  • And now data is getting leaner.

  • We can say more with less.

  • And data is becoming the universal language.

  • Not English, not Chinese, not Auslan

  • But the universal language of things.

  • And software

  • What we do once we have that communication

  • once we have that piece of information?

  • The software is what interprets it, it's what controls it.

  • It's what analyzes it and allow it to do stuff.

  • It's Facebook.

  • It's your Instagram.

  • It's the things that actually take pieces of data

  • from these pieces of hardware and makes it do stuff that is valuable to you.

  • And the last step

  • without all of this stuff,

  • if it wasn't connected,

  • it wouldn't mean anything

  • And connectivity of the last 10 years we've seen go from

  • cellular phones that were size of bricks,

  • through to Wi-Fi to ethernet,

  • to 2G GSM 4G.

  • All these different acronyms that are awesome

  • But essentially it has gotten cheaper

  • It has gotten faster.

  • This is an RF transmitter.

  • This is a dollar fifty.

  • I can attach these to one of these sensors with this little bit in the middle

  • and I can start beaming information to other things around me

  • with no ongoing cost,

  • with electricity cost as much as

  • one cent a month for one of these.

  • And I can start to have a conversation

  • in a language that is not English or Auslan,

  • but in data.

  • And once we have all of these things connected and get it up to the cloud

  • like these things here, we can actually start to use them.

  • The thing on the top left

  • I call them things cause they are on the Internet

  • The thing on the top left is a bluetooth beacon

  • It is used for marking things.

  • These are four dollars.

  • I can place it on any object

  • and use it as a proximity marker

  • as well as an identifier.

  • I can put this in my fridge

  • so that I know when mom went inside and ate 16 of these tim tams.

  • And for four dollars I can also put it outside

  • and know when my girlfriend gets home

  • that she got safely through the valley and into my apartment

  • On the bottom left is an air quality censor

  • This is on the top end of the costly electronics

  • But that's a 6-dollar censor

  • that allows me to tell if there is ammonia

  • Is there carbon dioxide or harmful gases in the environment around me?

  • And in the middle,

  • a galvanic skin response system

  • This allows me to measure the conductivity in my skin

  • down to the micro level

  • where I can know before my brain does

  • that I'm stressed

  • that I got adrenaline pumping

  • or that I'm on stage.

  • And on the right

  • we have consumerized version of these up to the 10 dollar mark

  • that allow anyone in their homes to start building the systems I'm talking about

  • out of the box, using softwares that are readily available.

  • And it's all in the wonderful cloud.

  • We can do it anywhere.

  • We can do it for ultra low cost.

  • We don't have to worry about maintaining it

  • and you don't have to be an expert to use it.

  • Now you may or may not know that this already exists in your home

  • and if it doesn't, you should already have it.

  • These systems allow us to walk up to our front door and not use a key.

  • But purely to

  • actually measure "Is Jordan there?

  • Has he walked up in a particular way

  • Is it him?

  • and unlock the door for me.

  • I can turn my TV on to channel 7 in the Simpsons

  • just as I get home and I like to in the afternoon.

  • I can actually measure how many people are in my room.

  • What's the humidity

  • what's the temperature outside

  • and automatically set my air conditioning.

  • I can talk to an unit

  • and turn my Philips hue lights at the right time

  • to the right color for my mood

  • and if I leave them on when I leave

  • it will take care of them for me

  • So what does this all mean? Why this big problem, right?

  • Why does it present so many different opportunities?

  • The thing is that now

  • we've gotten to a point

  • where this is such an available

  • and realistic opportunity

  • that it's going to explode.

  • And it's only gonna happen in 10 years.

  • Who loves their job at the moment?

  • Ah, a few of you are like, no.

  • Who thinks I'll be in the same job for the next five years?

  • Oh, you are all wrong!

  • Who thinks I'll be in the same job for ten years?

  • Even worse.

  • We are entering in a stage where everything will be connected.

  • And the impact of IoT will be $11 trillion a year by 2025

  • across factories, cities, human

  • identification and interaction

  • health care, work sites, and general safety

  • offices and vehicles.

  • And why now?

  • Because of the ultra low cost of this hardware,

  • the high availability of resources,

  • the low level of difficulty to compile them and put them

  • together and highly digital and connected universe

  • that is driving us toward

  • not just connecting our digital space

  • in our digital lives,

  • but our physical space

  • and the things we actually deal with everyday.

  • This is a vertical farm

  • The only human interaction needed

  • is placing the seeds into the soil.

  • Watering, trimming, harvesting

  • is all taking care of by IoT systems.

  • And Barcelona Smart City

  • over the last ten years

  • has made one of the most IoT integrated smart city in the world

  • By placing sensors that tell people where parking spots are

  • They've increased revenues for parking

  • over $50 million dollars per year.

  • They've decreased their energy cost by $37 Million a year

  • purely by having IoT in lights

  • to tell them when they actually need to turn on

  • and when people are there to use them.

  • Their Smart Gardens saved them $58 Million a year

  • in water usage

  • just by watering in the right places at the right time.

  • And now think about your home.

  • All those things I mentioned in your house

  • I already do in mine.

  • It's here.

  • It's not a futuristic object or an idea.

  • It's a reality.

  • So as we welcome the whole universe to the next era of connectivity

  • I ask

  • once all our tasks are automated

  • when the things we currently do everyday

  • the jobs the half of you love and half of you hate

  • are actually replaced by IoT devices

  • artificial intelligence,

  • interconnected systems

  • What do we do?

  • We come back to creativity, innovation, and humanity.

  • We cannot replace our need to create new things

  • to improve them

  • and to build interpersonal relationships.

  • We invent,

  • we build,

  • we optimise,

  • we operate,

  • we innovate.

  • And we remember to enjoy sometimes

  • before we invent again.

  • IoT is the beginning of a new era.

  • Thank you!

  • (applause)

So, the Internet of Things

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A2 初級 英國腔

TEDx】物聯網|Jordan Duffy|TEDxSouthBank|TEDxSouthBank。 (【TEDx】The internet of things | Jordan Duffy | TEDxSouthBank)

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    王聖晴 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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