Internet of Things
91´«Ã½
Smaller computing and radio devices, often unseen or built-into objects, will sense and transmit data, offering greater control and connectivity between objects.
How It’s Developing
Why It Matters
Notes and Resources
[1] “How the Internet of Things Will Change Business,” Antonio Regalado, MIT Technology Review, May 20, 2014, available from .
[2] “The Internet of Things is Far Bigger Than Anyone Realizes,” Daniel Burrus, Wired, November 21, 2014, available from .
[3] “How the Internet of Things Will Change Business,” Antonio Regalado, MIT Technology Review, May 20, 2014, available from .
[4] “The Internet of Things Will Thrive by 2025,” Janna Anderson and Lee Rainie, Pew Research Center, May 14, 2014, available from .
[5] “The Internet of You,” Rachel Metz, MIT Technology Review, May 20, 2014, available from .
[6] "L.L. Bean wants to know what you're doing in its duck boots," George Anderson, Retail Wire, February 9, 2018, available from .
[7] "The Rise of the Machines, Now What?" Greg Jones, Wired, February 17, 2015, available from .
[8] “Home, Hacked Home,” The Economist, July 12, 2014, available from .
[9] “The Half-Baked Security of Our Internet of Things,” Kashmir Hill, Forbes, May 27, 2014, available from .
[10] “The Internet of Things Could Drown Our Environment in Gadgets,” Klint Finley, Wired, June 5, 2014, available from .
[11] “The Internet of Things Will Thrive by 2025,” Janna Anderson and Lee Rainie, Pew Research Center, May 14, 2014, available from .
[12] “Chicago’s New Lamp Posts Will Track Pollution and Count People,” Jamie Condliffe, Gizmodo, June 23, 2014, available from .
[13] “Jawbone Opens a Window to Our Humanity Tracking Future,” Casey Johnston, Ars Technica, August 26, 2014, available from .
[14] "The Future Of Coding Is Here, And It Threatens To Wipe Out Everything In Its Path," Chet Kapoor, TechCrunch, September 27, 2015, available from .