The goal of this lecture is to discuss foundations, technologies, architectures, and examples of recent developments in the Internet of Things (IoT), and the influence of the IoT on application areas like health, transport or manufacturing.
Concrete Lecture Dates
The lecture is given in two-hour lectures on the following days:
- 16.10.2018: Introduction to the Lecture & General Introduction to the IoT
- 23.10.2018: Identification
- 30.10.2018: Communication - Part I
- 06.11.2018: Communication - Part II; IoT Hardware
- 13.11.2018: Elastic Computing for the IoT
- 20.11.2018: Security and Trust in the IoT
- 27.11.2018: Smart Systems
Lecture attendance is not mandatory. In addition, there are three mandatory meetings for the lab part of this course: a kickoff meeting, and two presentations. Your concrete dates and time slots for these meetings depends on the lab group that you have to register for here in TISS.
Please note: Since this is a relatively new course, the number of students is still unclear. Therefore, we will only finalize the lab groups when we know how many students will participate, i.e., when the registration and deregistration phase is over. However, it is already clear that the kickoff meetings for the lab part will take place on October 19th (time slots will be announced). Participation is obligatory!
In general, the TUWEL course has the most up-to-date and comprehensive information about lecture and lab dates and times, as well as information on upcoming deadlines.
Please note that the content is tentative and may change. The following topics are currently planned:
- Technologies for identification: RFID & EPC
- Communication in the IoT: Standards and protocols
- Elastic computing for the IoT: Cloud computing, fog computing, data stream processing
- Security and trust in the IoT: Concerns and solution approaches, blockchain technologies
- Application areas: Smart factories, smart cities, smart healthcare
Please note that the Cyber-Physical Systems Group offers the course "Internet of Things" (182.753), which provides a more engineering-driven approach to the field, while the course "Internet of Things for Smart Systems" applies a rather system- and application-oriented approach.
Significant knowledge in programming (e.g., Java / .NET) as well as distributed systems are required.
While it might be helpful if VU Advanced Internet Computing (184.269) has already been done, the two courses can also be done in parallel without a problem. It is explicitly no requirement to have already done the course Internet of Things (182.753), since the basic technologies required for the understanding will be recapitulated in the first lectures.