Internet of Things (IoT) may give the impression that it’s all about the sensors, hardware, communication middleware, network, and data but the real value (and company valuation) is in insights. Here we explore artificial intelligence (AI) and machine learning. The subfield of machine learning grew out of the effort of building artificial intelligence. Under the “learning” trait of AI, machine learning is the subfield that learns and adapts automatically through experience. It focuses on prediction, based on known properties learned from the training data.

Read More

A smart city is an urban development vision to integrate multiple information and communication technology (ICT) solutions in a secure fashion to manage a city’s assets. The goal of building a smart city is to improve quality of life by using technology to improve the efficiency of services and meet residents’ needs. ICT allows city officials to interact directly with the community and the city infrastructure and to monitor what is happening in the city, how the city is evolving, and how to enable a better quality of life. Through the use of sensors integrated with real-time monitoring systems, data are collected from citizens and devices - then processed and analyzed.

Read More

The Internet of things requires the cloud to work, and the cloud will evolve to better serve IoT. Most new devices, from refrigerators to cars, have a massive cloud-based back end. The cloud components of these technologies are becoming more systemic. Indeed, the cloud is assumed. More and more, people expect everything to be connected. No matter if it’s a washer and dryer, a refrigerator, or a car, they all communicate or will communicate with cloud servers. 

Read More

OUR IOT SOLUTIONS INCLUDE

Smart Enviornment

The concept of smart environments evolves from the definition of ubiquitous computing that promotes the ideas of a physical world that is richly and invisibly interwoven with sensors, actuators, displays, and computational elements, embedded seamlessly in the everyday objects of our lives, and connected through a continuous network.

Smart Water

Intelligent use of information and analytics deliver improved outcomes across the water management lifecycle. Data on water demand and supply from sensors and smart meter systems across utilities or industrial users'’ infrastructure and networks are collected and then analyzed and visualized in real-time to generate insight on water consumption behavior and supply conditions.

Smart Agriculture

Internet of Things has opened up extremely productive ways to cultivate the soil and raise livestock with the use of cheap, easy-to-install sensors and an abundance of insightful data. Internet of Things in agriculture, smart farming applications are gaining ground with the promise to deliver 24/7 visibility into soil and crop health, machinery in use, storage conditions, animal behavior, and energy consumption level.

Smart eHealth

There have been significant advances in the field of Internet of Things (IoT) recently. At the same time, there exists an ever-growing demand for ubiquitous healthcare systems to improve human health and well-being. In most of IoT-based patient monitoring systems, especially at smart homes or hospitals, there exists a bridging point (i.e., gateway) between a sensor network and the Internet.

Smart Security and Emergency Help

As IoT transforms entire industries, creating tremendous benefits and new risks, iQTek protect through IoT devices. Access control to restricted areas and detection of people in non-authorized areas. Detection of gas levels and leakages in industrial environments, surroundings of chemical factories and inside mines.

Smart Industry and Control

Many industrial and manufacturing firms have started to integrate wireless networks for sensor data and controller systems to improve internal processes. There are several different types of wireless technologies that can be retrofitted to integrate with the plant mechanisms, including WLAN technologies and sensor-and-control-type technologies. Connecting sensors and controllers within a plant to the Internet of Things is known as industrial IoT, or IIoT.