Books
Bruce Sterling

The Epic Struggle of the Internet of Things

If the hype is to be believed then the next big thing is the Internet of Things. But is it what you think it is? Because the Internet of Things is not about things on the internet. A world in which all our household gadgets can communicate with each other may sound vaguely useful, but it's not really for us consumers. The Internet of Things serves the interests of the technology giants, in their epic wrangles with each other. And it is they who will turn the jargon of “smart cities” and “smart homes” into a self-fulfilling prophesy. In this piercing and provocative essay, Bruce Sterling tells the story of an idea that just won't go away because there's too much money to be made and a whole world to control.
42 printed pages
Copyright owner
Bookwire
Original publication
2014
Publication year
2014
Publisher
Strelka Press
Have you already read it? How did you like it?
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Impressions

  • Дмитрий Безугловshared an impression8 years ago
    💡Learnt A Lot
    🎯Worthwhile
    🚀Unputdownable

    Твой холодильник не будет говорить с твоим телефоном. Через три секунды после того, как хлопнет дверца морозилки, он расскажет о мороженом, которое ты взял, производителю и его PR-службе. Интернет Вещей, увиденный как коалиция меж княжествами и рыцарскими орденами, как продукт новых иезуитов – антидот против красивых и вылизанных текстов про радости жизни в умном городе.
    Читать вместе с Shaping Things и "Обратной стороной Интернета" Евгения Морозова.

  • Roma Moskalenkoshared an impression6 years ago
    👍Worth reading

Quotes

  • Дмитрий Безугловhas quoted8 years ago
    The real problem with this scenario is that the reader thinks he’s the hero of the story.
  • ektkiselevahas quoted10 years ago
    People in the Internet of Things are like the woolly livestock of a feudal demesne, grazing under the watchful eye of barons in their hilltop Cloud Castles.
  • Niels Ørbæk Christensenhas quoted5 years ago
    It follows that most “things” are too humble and common to use the elaborate, aristocratic protocol of the Internet of Things. Lesser things have come to make do with alien protocols that use less electricity, such as MQTT, XMPP and DDS. These unruly “things” are like Balkan peasants muttering Albanian and Croat when their lords and masters want them to speak classical Latin

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