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This archive contains current and outdated firmware files for the popular IoT devices from shelly.cloud. In order to flash the related firmware to your Shelly device just do an OTA update with the related url.
How can we reset the expectations we have of connected devices, so that they are again worthy of our trust and money? Before we can bring the promise back, we must deweaponize the technology.
Guidelines for the hardware producer
These are things we want consumers to expect and demand of manufacturers.
- Control
*Think local - Decouple
- Open interfaces
- Be a good citizen
Everyday objects are becoming smarter. In ten years’ time, every piece of clothing you own, every piece of jewellery you wear, and every thing you carry with you will be measuring, weighing and calculating your life. In ten years, the world — your world — will be full of sensors.
The problem? The things are becoming smarter, but they’re also becoming selfish. Your lightbulbs aren’t talking to your media centre, your media centre isn’t talking to your blinds, and nobody is talking to the thermostat. Instead of talking to each other, everything is talking to you—you’ve ended up as a mechanical turk inside someone else’s software.
That situation can’t continue, we need to fix the Internet of Things. As our computing continues its diffusion out into the environment we need our things to work together. The things have to become not just smarter, but more co-operative, they need to become anticipatory rather than reactive.
Right now we have not so much an Internet of Things, but a series of Islands of Things. I present open source protocols and architectures that will help solve this trouble with the Internet of Things.
This project extends the base LMIC 1.6 implementation with 915 subband selection and demonstrates how to use the LMIC 1.6 LoRaWAN stack on a Raspberry Pi targeting the Dragino LoRa/GPS HAT and a Raspberry Pi Zero with a standalone Hope RFM95W LoRa module.
Die Marktforscher von Forrester haben elf Anbieter von IoT-Softwareplattformen unter die Lupe genommen.
In this installment of Minimal MQTT, I’m going to cover two loose ends: one on the sensor node side, and one on the MQTT server side. Specifically, I’ll tackle the NodeMCU’s sleep mode to reduce power and step you through bridging MQTT servers to get your data securely out of your home server and into “the cloud”, which is really just other people’s servers.
"We can’t continue to craft firewall and access rules based on IP addresses. Not feasible and ultimately, it’s not secure or accurate enough. We need ID-based access rules that not only consider who but what. Not just Bob, but Bob’s phone. Not just Bill, but Bill’s refrigerator. Not just Alice, but Alice’s television. ... A traditional IP-based perimeter just isn’t going to be enough to meet the new requirements for application delivery….”
IBM has developed an SDK to make wireless sensor networks easier to program http://t.co/tfTF8qr01k #iot