The Internet of Things
Intel has designed a large infographic, The Internet of Things that explores the growing number of devices connected to the Internet since 1960 through predictions up to 2020. (NOT to be confused with The Internet of Things infographic released by Cisco earlier this year with the same name) High-Resolution PDF version, additional information and the data files are available here.
The Internet is evolving, again. Every day, billions of people connect to the Internet through billions of devices – PCs, smartphones and TVs to name just a few. While the PC remains at the centre of this evolution, Internet connectivity is now embedded into cars, fitness equipment, factory robots and vending machines. This smarter, connected world has the potential to change how we live.
We’re entering a new phase of Internet evolution. It is expanding much more rapidly than it has done in the last decade. Increasing numbers of everyday appliances are connecting to the Internet, their environment and to each other. Cars, fitness equipment, factory robots, retail signage and vending machines are becoming ‘smart’ thanks to tiny embedded computer processors and sensors, just like those in your laptop or mobile phone.
I have mixed feelings about this one. It’s visually attractive, and would make a really nice printed poster. The data is valuable and interesting, apparently gathered from a large number of disparate sources, but the URL listed at the bottom to view the sources didn’t work for me.
However, all of the colored lines aren’t actually connecting any events or actually combining to create a visualization of the values on the left side of the page. While it visually implies the growing connections to the Internet and complexity, it doesn’t have any connection to the actual data.
I like the circle diagram at the bottom of the growing millions of PCs sold every day, but the “80% of of all PCs shipped today have Intel Inside” turned a fun, informative infographic into an ad and could turn off some readers.
Thanks to Emma for sending in the link!