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Smart Home

Samsung Smart Home enables home appliances, such as a refrigerator, washing machine, air conditioner, oven, robotic vacuum cleaner and lighting, to be linked with and collectively managed by a mobile device (phone, tablet, PC, Gear) or a smart TV.

http://developer.samsung.com/smart-home

Edited by: John Ixion on 04 Nov, 2014

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17 Replies
John Ixion

Today at the Samsung Developer Conference, SmartThings is unveiling its Samsung Smart Home. This four-room, 1720-square-foot house is the centerpiece of the conference’s main floor and highlights a few of the many possibilities available in a SmartThings home today, as well as some exciting new integrations that will be available soon.

http://blog.smartthings.com/news/smartthings-updates/smartthings-powers-samsung-smart-home/

John Ixion

Gear S http://blog.smartthings.com/video/video-smartthings-galaxy-gear-s-watch/

John Ixion

The new SmartThings Hub will be a Tizen device: https://gigaom.com/2015/01/06/smartthings-next-generation-hub-will-support-thread-and-the-oic/

John Ixion

The Gear S app is available: http://blog.smartthings.com/news/smartthings-updates/smartthings-releases-app-galaxy-gear-s/

John Ixion

Welcome to IoTivity, an Open Source Project sponsored by the Open Interconnect Consortium (OIC) and hosted by the Linux Foundation. The aim of this project is to develop an open source software framework to seamlessly connect the billions of devices in the emerging Internet of Things (IoT), across multiple operating systems and network protocols.

The founders of the OIC believe that both an industry standard specification and an open source implementation are necessary to drive true interoperability across these IoT devices. Moreover, the founders believe that true innovation can only happen when multiple parties come together, developing the source code in an open form, under open source governance rules. 

In the next few months, the consortium will develop and release a 1.0 standard specification. At the same time, the IoTivity project will release a full open source implementation of that specification. However, you can get started today by downloading and exploring the current release, and start contributing.

While we encourage your company to join the OIC, membership is not a requirement to participate in the open source project. IoTivity is open to everyone.

Please join our community to help us connect the next billion devices!

https://www.iotivity.org/

John Ixion

upcoming IoT events: http://openinterconnect.org/category/events/

John Ixion

SmartThings in the UK

http://stukdevcall.splashthat.com/

John Ixion

Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd. today announced that Young Sohn, President and Chief Strategy Officer of Samsung Electronics Ltd., will deliver the opening keynote address at the second annual Internet of Things (IoT) World on May 12, 2015, at 9 a.m., where he will reveal a major company milestone that will enable the new wave of groundbreaking IoT devices and services. The event will bring together industry leaders, entrepreneurs, developers and emerging companies to discuss the future of IoT and its profound implications at the Moscone Center in San Francisco.

http://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20150506005267/en/Samsung-President-Young-Sohn-Unveil-Platforms-IoT#.VUuhTnVU54t

http://www.makeeverythingsmarter.com/

John Ixion

To enable faster deployment of IoT applications and services, Sohn announced the Samsung ARTIK™ platform. ARTIK is a production-ready, open platform that includes the hardware, software, development boards, drivers, tools, advanced security features and connectivity for rapidly building cloud-connected IoT devices. The ARTIK platform comes in a variety of configurations to meet the specific requirements of a wide range of IoT market segments from wearables and home automation, to smart lighting and industrial applications. More information on the ARTIK platform can be found by visiting www.artik.io.

http://global.samsungtomorrow.com/samsung-calls-on-industry-to-use-internet-of-things-to-address-societal-challenges/

John Ixion

If you plan on building or buying a connected gadget in the immediate future, Samsung wants to be inside of it. Today the company announced Artik, a collection of small system-on-chips designed to power everything from wearable devices to home appliances.

http://www.theverge.com/2015/5/12/8592637/samsung-artik-iot-platform

John Ixion

Yesterday at IoT World, we jointly announced some things along with the Samsung Strategy and Innovation Center (SSIC). I want to make everyone aware of the announcement and what it means for SmartThings.

http://community.smartthings.com/t/smartthings-open-cloud-the-artik-chip/16548

John Ixion

Temboo today announced that Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd., has selected its technology stack to support their new ARTIK platform for the Internet of Things (IoT). Every Samsung ARTIK board ships natively with a Temboo library that, in conjunction with the Temboo website, lets developers quickly generate code for the IoT applications they're building. The ARTIK platform includes a series of new programmable Samsung development boards that, combined with Temboo, enable developers to bring the computing power and flexible programming features of Temboo’s cloud-based platform to all ARTIK devices.

https://temboo.com/samsungrelease

John Ixion

The Internet of Things (IoT) is regularly in the news, and we’re expecting there to be something like one hundred billion IoT devices within ten years. The promise of innovative new services and efficiency savings are fueling interest in a wide range of potential applications across many sectors including smart homes, healthcare, smart grids, smart cities, retail, and smart industry. Currently there is a lot of activity, but it is occurring in isolation, resulting in product silos and incompatible platforms. The World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) is seeking to change that through work on global standards for using web technologies that bridge IoT platforms through the Web, based upon a new class of Web servers. The Internet provides a basis for connecting systems, but like the phone system, it is not useful unless people are speaking in the same language. W3C proposes a conceptual framework with shared semantics and data formats as the basis for interoperability.

http://www.w3.org/blog/2015/05/building-the-web-of-things/

John Ixion
Internet of Things technologies connect "Things" and the things are getting smarter based on the connection. However there are still some barriers that each devices require its own application and/or services.
IoT.js aims to provide inter-operable service platform in the world of IoT, based on web technology. The target of IoT.js is to run in resource constrained devices such as only few kilobytes of RAM available device. Thus it will supports very wide range of "Things".
IoT.js is just taking the first steps and would like to get together with developers who has interests on our goal.
 
https://github.com/Samsung/iotjs/wiki
John Ixion
John Ixion

a lightweight Temboo library ships on every ARTIK module

Sam Konor

Interesting article. Information technology is advancing and with it cyberattacks. It's dangerous to live.