Featured Articles Want your IoT devices to last a billion years? Use an AA battery, or just suck the leakage out of your transistors, according to a new paper in the American Association for the Advancement of Science journal Science, published in the October 21 issue. And the hits just keep on coming. In a new study, security firm ForeScout has shown that it takes fewer than three minutes to hack many common Enterprise IoT devices. This in-depth analysis shows the dangers posed by enterprise IoT devices, and seems to reveal that most can act as points of entry into critical enterprise networks. Sponsored by: SAP Executive Summit IoT will be jam-packed with visionary keynotes, live demos, real-life customer success stories, engaging roundtable discussions, and invaluable networking opportunities for game-changing executives like you. Join us in NYC to learn how you can take the right action in the moment and lead your organization to success. Technology is changing at a scary pace. But, what really haunts IT decision makers as they sit in front of their computer screens late at night? What new innovations will rise up to take over the underworld? The answers come thanks to a new survey of 511 U.S. IT managers from Finn Partners Technology Practice. As I've written again and again, consumers don't trust the IoT. The recent Mirai and SSH problems have thrown that into stark relief, and now there's some evidence (other than the flat sales figures) that shows I'm probably right. Rapid time-to-market is increasingly important in the rollout of new applications and services, or to put it in simpler terms: everyone wants to be first. As the Internet of Things (IoT) develops and evolves across the globe, the competition between communication protocols grows increasingly heated. Inmarsat, a provider of global mobile satellite communications, and Vodafone have announced a new roaming agreement designed to enable international satellite and cellular roaming connectivity for the Internet of Things (IoT) that the companies say will deliver greater reliability and reach than either has been able to offer previously. Kepware Technologies, a PTC business developing industrial connectivity software, has announced HIROTEC AMERICA, a component and tooling supplier for the automotive industry, has implemented the KEPServerEX software for data management and connectivity in its first Internet of Things (IoT) implementation. Advertise With Us | | Become a TMCnet columnist! Become a TMCnet columnist! Want to contribute your expertise to a growing audience of technology professionals? Become a writer, blogger or columnist for the TMCnet website and this newsletter. Contact TMCnet Group Editorial Director, Erik Linask, at elinask@tmcnet.com for details. | |
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