首页
登录
职称英语
Internet of Things Era Is ComingA)From meat thermometers mo
Internet of Things Era Is ComingA)From meat thermometers mo
游客
2023-08-23
52
管理
问题
Internet of Things Era Is Coming
A)From meat thermometers monitored with a smart phone to Wi-Fi-equipped dog collars, devices and services in homes and businesses are increasingly being connected to the Internet, a long-awaited trend that is causing a surge of optimism in the tech sector.
B)Large and small companies are churning out a number of Internet-connected gadgets, a central theme as the Consumer Electronics Show opens this week in Las Vegas. Devices on the market or the drawing board include smart door locks, toothbrushes, wristwatches, fitness trackers, smoke detectors, surveillance cameras, ovens, toys and robots.
C)But the much-ballyhooed Internet of Things still is largely a collection of possibilities. Sales of the new-wave products are threatened by a number of stumbling blocks that could slow investment—from conflicting wireless-communications standards to debates about how much processing power should be built into gadgets.
D)Some industry executives say privacy concerns may be even more serious, without a consensus on how to exploit all the data that could be generated by a flood of new sensors and Internet-connected video cameras. "Big data is worth absolutely nothing without big judgment", says Joseph Bradley, director of what Cisco Systems Inc. calls its "Internet of Everything" consulting practice. Nonetheless, heavyweights like General Electric Co., Intel Corp. and Qualcomm Inc. are jockeying for position. "I’ve never seen our industry go as fast as it is, or create as much value," says Marc Benioff, chief executive of Salesforce.com Inc. "It’ s a very magical time."
E)Cisco estimates that the number of devices connected to the Internet will swell from about 10 billion today to 50 billion by 2020, as wireless links spread beyond smart phones and PCs to many other kinds of devices. The Silicon Valley giant’s chief executive, John Chambers, is expected to discuss the opportunities Tuesday in a keynote speech at CES.
F)Gartner Inc. puts the number of connected devices at fewer than 30 billion, but sees $309 billion in additional revenue for product and service suppliers by 2020 and $1.9 trillion in total economic impact from cost savings, improved productivity and other factors.
G)The vision of a world of smart gadgets emerged even before the Web. A.C. "Mike" Markkula, a co-founder of Apple Computer Inc., had a brainstorm in the mid-1980s about combining functions for networking and controlling devices on a single chip. Those "neurons", as they came to be called, were expected to spread widely once their cost fell to around $1. But the company he founded, Echelon Corp., didn’t hit that target and has had a bumpy history. "I keep kicking myself," he says, "I was 20 years too soon."
H)Chip makers did steadily push down the cost of adding intelligence to everyday gadgets, often to less than $5. Another driver has been the onslaught of smart phones and tablets, which can serve as handy Web-connected remote controls for devices in the home and workplace. Potential benefits range from fairly prosaic to profound. Consumers, for example, can now use smart phones to remotely check if they locked doors, left the lights on or turned down the thermostat. Retailers can help smart phone users find goods on store shelves, and wirelessly pitch sales promotions. Parking meters can communicate with smart phone users.
I)Companies like Silver Spring Networks Inc. sell wireless meters to manage energy usage, while GE exploits data generated by sensors to monitor the health of jet engines and gas turbines. The opportunities have attracted a number of startups, some of which have managed to raise substantial funding from venture capitalists. The best-known is Nest Labs Inc., a maker of Wi-Fi-equipped thermostats and smoke detectors led by former Apple Inc. executive Tony Fadell. Another example is August, which is developing smart door locks and has raised $10 million to date.
J)Others are leaning heavily on crowd funding sites like Kickstarter and Indiegogo, as investors worry about the potential costs of hatching hardware startups—and the likelihood that entrenched companies will adapt their existing products to dominate Internet-of-Things opportunities. "The body count is quite high of startups that have made hardware," says Jason Johnson, August’s CEO and founder of the Internet of Things Consortium.
K)For those reasons, some startups are developing new services to help manage connected devices, while existing companies are modifying business models to exploit the data likely to flow from them. Insurance companies, for example, can respond to sensors and wireless connections in cars to charge drivers by the mile and speed they drive, instead of by where they live. "The value of the devices will be secondary to the services they enable," says Thomas Lee, a Stanford University professor of electrical engineering and co-founder of Ayla Networks Inc., an online service hoping to help turn ordinary products into cloud-connected devices.
L)So far, however, smart-home products seem mainly to be attracting technology enthusiasts. Only 1% to 2% of American consumers surveyed by Forrester Research in mid-2013 were using five widely touted home-automation offerings. Some 28% of respondents said they were interested in controlling appliances with a smartphone, but 53% weren’t. Other hurdles face companies tackling the Internet of Things, including a fragmented assortment of wireless communications technologies. In home automation, for example, device makers face options that include Insteon, Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, Zigby, Z-Wave and earlier proprietary technologies.
M)"It’s not that things aren’t getting connected—they are getting connected badly," says Rob Chandhok, president of Qualcomm’s interactive platforms unit. Qualcomm is trying to rally hardware makers around a technology called AllJoyn to help devices discover each other and collaborate. Meanwhile, startups trying to sell their own control devices are going through contortions; Revolv Inc., for example, is marketing a hub that can communicate using seven different radio technologies.
N)Mike Soucie, Revolv’ s co-founder and marketing head, says agreements on key communications technologies may be five to 10 years away. Any standards that do emerge are likely to apply to a single market—like home security or transportation— rather than to many industries, predicts Gilad Meiri, chief executive of Neura Inc., a startup developing technology to help orchestrate connected devices.
O)Assuming devices can communicate, manufacturers need conventions for telling them what to do and how to work together. Meanwhile, other basic questions remain— like just how much intelligence should everyday devices have? Companies like Intel and ARM Holdings PLC, which license technology to chip makers, stress the benefits brought by processors that can run sophisticated software and protocols that allow them to connect directly to the Internet.
P)But others believe such complex technology can reduce the reliability of home appliances and other devices, while raising the odds of bugs or security holes that could be exploited by attackers. They prefer simpler chips called microcontrollers, which are harder to reprogram to do unintended things. "I want my refrigerator to be a thing; I don’t want it to be a computer," says Shane Dyer, chief executive of Arrayent Inc., a startup marketing a Web-based service to manage microcontroller-powered devices. Q)Moreover, the data generated by connected devices could be used in ways consumers don’t like and create liabilities for companies. Chris Bruce, chief executive of Sproutling—a startup developing a smart phone-connected baby monitor—wonders if services that store data from connected devices might get subpoenas if something bad happens. There are at least as many questions about the fast-growing flood of data from Internet-connected security cameras.
R)"It is more than a little creepy," says David Alan Grier, an associate professor of science and technology policy at George Washington University and 2013 president of the IEEE Computer Society. "There is going to have to be some clear thinking and some clear understanding of what is going on." [br] According to Cisco, with the exploitation of wireless links, the amount of Internet-connected devices will increase 40 billion by 2020.
选项
答案
E
解析
题干意为思科公司估计,随着无线连接的开发.到2020年.连接互联网的设备数量会增加400亿。根据题干中的“Cisco”和“wireless links”可定位至E段首句“Cisco estimates that the number of devices connected to the Internet will swell fromabout 10 billion today to 50 billion by 2020,as wireless links spread beyond smartphones and PCs to many other kinds of devices.”.题干是对该句的同义改写,因此出自E段。
转载请注明原文地址:https://tihaiku.com/zcyy/2950274.html
相关试题推荐
[originaltext]I’llstillbeworking,butthingswouldbedifferent.Withan
[originaltext]I’llstillbeworking,butthingswouldbedifferent.Withan
[originaltext]I’llstillbeworking,butthingswouldbedifferent.Withan
TheInternetandcellphonesarebringingpeopletogether,not【C1】______usa
TheInternetandcellphonesarebringingpeopletogether,not【C1】______usa
TheInternetandcellphonesarebringingpeopletogether,not【C1】______usa
TheInternetandcellphonesarebringingpeopletogether,not【C1】______usa
[originaltext]TheInternethascreatedawholenewworldofsocialcommunic
[originaltext]TheInternethascreatedawholenewworldofsocialcommunic
Inthethrillingprogressiveyearsoftheearly20thcentury,fewthingswer
随机试题
Ileftfortheofficeearlierthanusualthismorning______trafficjam.A、inli
生长因子受体的细胞外结构域(N端)结合生长因子,跨膜区由单一α螺旋组成,而细胞内
下列有关建筑中水处理系统设计要求的描述中,哪几项错误?()A.原水为优质杂排
运输产品的形式层包括( )。A.企业品牌标识 B.产品预订制度 C.站场港
【教学过程】 环节一:导入新课 新闻导入。教师播放一段经济类新闻视频,提问学生:视频中出现的“产业结构调整”是什么意思?为什么我们现在需要进行产业结构的
蛤蚧的药用部位是A.背甲及腹甲 B.胆结石 C.干燥分泌物 D.干燥体
在凭证与记录控制中,建立严格的凭证制度要求( )。A.凭证种类要齐全 B.凭
参照国际风险管理标准,集中型风险管理部门的人员必须具备的主要技能包括()。
A. B. C. D.
下列是五因素传播模式的表述,哪项是正确的A.受传者-媒介-信息-受传者-效果
最新回复
(
0
)