Our phones and tablets, our TVs and increasingly our houses, the fitness bands so many of us wear and GPS systems we patch into when we’re lost, seeking directions or just happen to link up to a new Wi-Fi network; these and so many other things are linking with, to and around us to become the internet of things. That is to say, the internet, the thing that is letting you read this, is increasingly inanimate (except, of course it always has been) in that it is now providing a network for inanimate things to link to each other, and for the last few years we’ve been talking about, excited by and trying to make sense of this new internet (and I’m sure some of wondering how this relates to Web2.0 – remember that?). Well, this is a useful introduction to this Internet of Things (IoT), and term I cannot hear without thinking of SkyNet (a sure sign there has been too much Terminator in my life).
Greengard is up front about being a fan of the things the IoT brings his life: he opens with a story about his actions that become a kind of paean to technological networking. What I like though is that he doesn’t assume that 1) we are, or 2) that we even know what this Internet of Things is. He sets the scene really well, with a discussion of mobility, of the tools we use to connect and the place of ‘the cloud’ (which of course is nothing so ethereal but giant server warehouses) in our state of being connected. As well as not assuming we know what the internet of things might be, he also (and I welcome this) doesn’t assume that we know how we got there/here so there is a good, short and focused exploration of the development of the Internet (a story we’re used to, but here tailored to this current state of heightened connectivity) and of the development of smart technology.
Only then does he begin to explore the operation of the IoT, in our domestic lives but more especially in business with an emphasis on logistics and marketing (the current places where the IoT has direct impacts) as well as giving space to the concerns about privacy, intrusiveness, autonomy and civil liberties associated with the IoT, noting that it is hard enough for us to control our on-line world when we’re trying to run our technology let along when inanimate things are the active forces (of the IoT).
So, this is a good, up-to-date and timely entry to the MIT Essential Knowledge series that tries to strike a balance between the excitement of this new technological connectedness and worries about its implications. It seems, however, that Greengard’s engagement with and use of the IoT bleeds into the excitement for the potential the text offers rather than the concerns expressed by those who are more sceptical: that might just be my scepticism about the IoT of course……
The major problem is that things in this field are changing so fast that the usefulness of this book is likely to be time limited: if you’re reading this after late 2016, there may well be a new edition needed, but even so this is worth a look for a quick introduction to what may well be shaping up to be a major public policy and socio-cultural as well as commercial issue. It is probably worth 3½ stars and I’m just being churlish……