A forum in Milan will explore its evolution and its potential impact from many points of view
We’re entering the era of the Internet of Things (IoT) in which billions of devices will communicate with their users and each other to make the world work better—we hope. From 14 to 16 December, the second IEEE World Forum on Internet of Things (WF-IoT) will gather about 350 industry leaders, academics, entrepreneurs, government policymakers, and students in Milan to move those hopes closer to reality. Seven IEEE societies are sponsoring the conference.
The basic technologies are either emerging or already here. More than 2 billion people now carry sensor-crammed smartphones in their pockets (not to mention wristbands and other information-producing wearables), and the number of phone users alone is projected to exceed 6 billion within five years. Small sensors that harvest energy from body motion are in the works. And the new Internet addressing scheme, Internet Protocol version 6, with 128-bit addresses rather than the current 32 bits, “will support enough unique addresses for everyone in the world to have more than a billion IP addresses for every second of their lives,” says IEEE Member Antonio Skarmeta, who chairs the forum’s technical program committee.