Wednesday, 6 October 2021

  • Industry News

1982

Students invent a connected Coke machine

Students at Carnegie Mellon University connected the department vending machine to the main computer via the local network, enabling them to check if drinks were available and cold. Not everyone liked Coke, but they all loved this invention.

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1989

 

The World Wide Web is invented

British scientist Tim Berners-Lee invented the World Wide Web (WWW) while working at CERN. The Governmental system of satellites was complemented by privately held ones, providing future IoT systems with communications. The first website that Berners-Lee brought online from the Swiss Alps is still available.

 

 

 

1990-1993

World's first IoT device invented

In 1990, John Romkey created the first IOT device – a toaster that could be turned on and off over the Internet. By 1991, he had automated the entire process by adding a crane system that inserted the bread as well.
Then in 1993, the world's first webcam prototype, the Trojan Room Coffee Pot, was installed at the University of Cambridge to monitor the amount of coffee remaining in the brewing machine.

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1998

 

Mark Weiser creates a connected water fountain

Father of ubiquitous computing Mark Weiser created a fountain outside his office. The flow and the height of the water mimicked the price trends and volume of the stock market in real-time.
The 2008 crisis would have been a spectacular sight.

 

 

 

1999

“The Internet of Things” is coined

Kevin Ashton, the founder of Auto-ID, titled a presentation he made at Procter & Gamble “The Internet of Things”. Ashton linked the ideas of RFID (radio-frequency identification) and the Internet, which impressed the listeners with its innovativeness. While his idea of RFID-based device connectivity differs from today’s IP-based (Internet Protocol) IoT, Ashton’s breakthrough played an essential role in IoT history and technological development overall.

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2005

 

The first smart home device is created

Originally released in June 2005, the Nabaztag – an early version of smart home devices like Alexa and Google Home – was an ambient electronic device shaped like a rabbit, able to alert its owner and speak to them about the weather, stock market changes, RSS feeds, etc.
In 2019, the iconic bunny made a comeback for a limited time with a new Raspberry Pi brain.

 

 

 

2008-2009

IoT is born

According to Cisco IBSG*, IoT was conceived between 2008 and 2009, when the number of connected machines surpassed the number of humans on the planet. Currently, there are about 21.5 billion connected devices in the world – almost three times the number of people on the planet.

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2011

 

IoT added to the hype-cycle for emerging technologies

In 2011, Gartner, the market research company that invented the famous “hype-cycle for emerging technologies”, included “The Internet of Things” on their list. This year, Gartner named Vodafone as a Leader in its 2021 Magic Quadrant for Managed IoT Connectivity Services for the seventh time in a row **.

 

 

 

 

2013-2014

IoT devices start
using sensors

Thermostats and home lighting started using sensors to accurately sense the surrounding environment. This allowed people to control home lighting, garage doors and thermostats all from their phone.

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2014

 

The first “smart city” is created

As a smart city “testbed”, Smart Docklands in Dublin provided a platform for innovators to test cutting-edge technology solutions to local challenges, such as smart bins, sensors monitoring flood levels and city sound monitoring sensors.

 

 

 

2018

IoT enters the healthcare and health insurance industries

Healthcare devices represent one of the fastest-growing sectors of the IoT market. The value of this sector – sometimes called the Internet of Medical Things (IoMT) – is predicted to reach $176 billion by 2026***. IoT technology allows healthcare professionals to access patient data and improve the quality of wearable medical devices. Medical IoT solutions include blood glucose and heart rate monitoring, pacemakers, fall detection, geofencing and location monitoring.

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2020

 

IoT steps up in response to the COVID-19 crisis

In 2020, heat detection cameras started popping up in all sorts of public spaces to measure people’s temperature. Using infrared technology, thermal cameras detect radiating heat from a body. Although these devices were originally not designed to be used for medical purposes – they are often deployed by firefighters to track smouldering embers and police to search for out-of-sight suspects