The Internet of Things (IoT) and the Industrial Internet of Things (IIoT) are evolving towards the next generation of Tactile IoT/IIoT, which will bring together hyperconnectivity, edge computing, Distributed Ledger Technologies (DLTs) and Artificial Intelligence (AI). Future IoT applications will apply AI methods, such as machine learning (ML) and neural networks (NNs), to optimize the processing of information, as well as to integrate robotic devices, drones, autonomous vehicles, augmented and virtual reality (AR/VR), and digital assistants. These applications will engender new products, services and experiences that will offer many benefits to businesses, consumers and industries. A more human-centred perspective will allow us
This paper presents the main advantages and challenges that the introduction of millimeter-wave mobile access brings to the forthcoming 5G system architecture, focusing on the expected impact of that technology on standards and regulation bodies. The EU-funded project MiWaveS is taken as a concrete example for the standardization impact.
This paper is focused on demonstrating a real testbed for managing logistics systems in hospital environment exploiting the benefits of M2M and IoT paradigms. The work presents an architecture based on low-cost devices interacting with an enterprise application server placed anywhere in the Internet following the architecture proposed by ETSI for M2M systems. Combining multiple communication technologies (NFC, UMTS, 802.11, ZigBee and 802.3) and adapting their capabilities to different functional requirements, we are capable of creating autonomous and self-managed systems. The deployed architecture integrates at end device level, a NFC reader for tracking the level of remaining stocks and multiple output interfaces for exchanging messages with the application server. The system copes with cost, availability, scalability and easy deployment requirements, being the functionality also adaptable to the requirements of potential customers.
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