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| en:iot-open:getting_familiar_with_your_hardware_rtu_itmo_sut [2018/05/09 13:07] – created pczekalski | en:iot-open:getting_familiar_with_your_hardware_rtu_itmo_sut [2020/07/20 12:00] (current) – external edit 127.0.0.1 | ||
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| - | ===== IoT Hardware | + | ====== IoT Hardware |
| - | -- To be done (Piotr Czekalski) -- | + | IoT hardware infrastructure is mostly inheriting from the embedded systems of the SoC type. As IoT devices are by its nature network-enabled, many of the existing embedded platforms evolved towards network-enabled solutions, sometimes indirectly through delivering network processor |
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| + | * "4.1. Most Noticeable Platforms"; | ||
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| + | * "4.2. [[en:iot-open: | ||
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| + | * "4.3. [[en:iot-open: | ||
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| + | * "4.4. [[en: | ||
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| + | * "4.5. [[en: | ||
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| + | ===== Most Noticeable Platforms ===== | ||
| + | IoT market is an emerging one. New hardware solutions appear almost daily, while others disappear quick. At the moment of writing this publication (2016–2019), | ||
| + | * AVR: Arduino – a development board that uses Atmel SoC, that is no doubt the most popular development platform for enthusiasts and professionals. Arduino itself barely offers networking capabilities yet; there is a vast number of extension boards including network interfaces (both wired and wireless); | ||
| + | * ESP: Espriff (Espressif Systems) – the great SoC solution of the single SoC including wireless network interfaces; | ||
| + | * ARM: Raspberry Pi (and its clones) – advanced boards, including Linux operating system with GUI interface, even able to replace desktop computers. | ||
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