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Ruth Robinson's curator insight,
December 10, 2015 12:00 AM
I wish not to be, but all the tech that's going on and experimenting can't tell!
Farid Mheir's curator insight,
November 11, 2015 7:50 PM
I knew they did this for dogs but never thought they did it for humans. But come to think of it, makes perfect sense. Or it will become the biggest invasion of privacy ever. Great insight from André!
Luigi Cappel's comment,
November 21, 2015 2:25 PM
For me it would depend on what part of the world I live in. In New Zealand I would have no problem wearing a chip that I could use for ID for building access, customs, instead of passwords or finger scanners. Being a law abiding citizen in a relatively corruption free country, I'd be more than happy, providing as per the law, I knew how any information about me was being used and could revoke access where it was abused. If I was living in other countries, which may remain nameless, I would steer well clear, because being innocent and law abiding doesn't mean that you are safe.
Farid Mheir's comment,
November 21, 2015 5:33 PM
@Russell R. Roberts, Jr. @Luigi Cappel both of you thank you for insightful comments and reshare... as always!
Luigi Cappel's comment,
November 21, 2015 2:25 PM
For me it would depend on what part of the world I live in. In New Zealand I would have no problem wearing a chip that I could use for ID for building access, customs, instead of passwords or finger scanners. Being a law abiding citizen in a relatively corruption free country, I'd be more than happy, providing as per the law, I knew how any information about me was being used and could revoke access where it was abused. If I was living in other countries, which may remain nameless, I would steer well clear, because being innocent and law abiding doesn't mean that you are safe.
Farid Mheir's comment,
November 21, 2015 5:33 PM
@Russell R. Roberts, Jr. @Luigi Cappel both of you thank you for insightful comments and reshare... as always!
Farid Mheir's curator insight,
December 9, 2016 3:22 PM
I knew they did this for dogs but never thought they did it for humans. But come to think of it, makes perfect sense. Or it will become the biggest invasion of privacy ever.
Tracy Harding's comment,
September 1, 2015 9:19 AM
You need to work on formatting of your replies. This is one giant sentence. Remember the requirements. You need a 2-3 sentence summary, at least 1 sentence of IR implications and 1 sentence about your thoughts.
Farid Mheir's comment,
September 1, 2015 9:23 AM
@Tracy Harding: not sure I understand your comment re: formatting. Can you be more specific and email me a screengrab? thank you!
Fernando Martinez Romero's curator insight,
June 25, 2015 12:03 AM
Recurrentemente se habla del Internet de las Cosas, sin embargo muchas veces las personas arman en sus cabezas ideas que viajan por el espectro de la ciencia ficción, sin embargo, poco dan ese salto a conocer un poco más de aquello, lo mejor es que cuando se hace, te enteras, que el Internet de las cosas es más común y mas cotidiano de lo que se espera y que su funcionalidad no es ficción y esta al alcance de nuestras manos. Bienvenido Internet de las cosas y bienvenido el futuro de la información a nuestro alcance.
Farid Mheir's comment,
June 2, 2015 11:36 AM
thank you @Volkmar Langer @Tom Pick @Jean-Claude CARO. Please also feel free to recommend my topic if you fell like it!
Pierre Tran's curator insight,
March 4, 2015 3:56 PM
Du Web 1.0 au Web généticiel, une mise en perspective vertigineuse de l'évolution d'internet.
Hamza Ali's curator insight,
June 6, 2014 11:03 AM
are you looking for new mobiles ???? then visit http://hintamobile.com/ you can compare your favorite mobiles
Michael Allenberg's curator insight,
April 5, 2014 11:11 AM
A little primer to get you all thinking...
René Breyel's curator insight,
March 4, 2014 11:15 AM
Toutes les statistiques sur ce marché en pleine explosion... Il est intéressant de voir que le premier Bénéfice perçu de l'IoT est l'augmentation de l'efficacité opérationnelle (46%). À croire que toutes ces choses que l'on connecte à Internet vont véritablement nous aider dans la vie de tous les jours !... Bien entendu, une croissance démesurée de ce marché provient encore de l'Asie (à 51%). |
Curated by Farid Mheir
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This website proposes use cases for beacons, from restaurant push notifications, parking meter interaction and connected devices. Other cookbooks are also presented here:
http://sco.lt/7VHCsb
Google announced "the physical web" project months ago as an open source project. Checkout the pages with tons of examples and more info about how to build them.
Google also recently has announced it will support it natively in Android Chrome, making discovery of beacons much easier as it won't require any new app to be installed - assuming Chrome is on every device.
http://blog.chromium.org/2016/02/the-physical-web-expands-to-chrome-for_10.html
With the rise of IoT, we can expect more of these in the future. However given the lukewarm reception of QR codes or Apple iBeacons, we can question their real-world adoption rate - even though they are builtin to millions of iPhone and iPad iOS devices the concept has not caught on it seems http://sco.lt/97shYP
Yet there is a true need for physical devices to connect with our mobile devices so I expect new solutions to be proposed, with one catching on at some point in time.