The Internet of Things enables great applications, such as energy-aware homes or real-time asset tracking. With these networks gaining maturity, standardization bodies have started to work on standardizing how these networks of tiny devices communicate.
The goal of the OpenWSN project is to provide open-source implementations of a complete protocol stack based on Internet of Things standards, on a variety of software and hardware platforms. This implementation can then help academia and industry verify the applicability of these standards to the Internet of Things, for those networks to become truly ubiquitous.
Our OpenWSN effort at UC Berkeley is one of many open source hardware and software projects for wireless sensor networks. Here are links to some of our friends and colleagues around the world.
Mark your calendars! Standards for the Industrial IoT: a hands-on tutorial on with OpenWSN and OpenMote. Thomas Watteyne, Xavier Vilajosana, Pere Tuset-Peiro. IEEE International Symposium on Personal, Indoor and Mobile Radio Communications (PIMRC), Valencia, Spain, 4-8 September 2016. |
Mark your calendars! OpenWSN & OpenMote: Hands-on Tutorial on Open Source Industrial IoT. Thomas Watteyne, Xavier Vilajosana, Pere Tuset-Peiro. International Conference on Telecommunications (ICT), Thessaloniki, Greece, 16-18 May 2016. |
The standards under development most applicable for the Internet of Things are:
These standards can be layered one on top of another, forming the following protocol stack: