Jump to ratings and reviews
Rate this book

Internet of Things From Hype to Reality: The Road to Digitization

Rate this book
This textbook presents an end-to-end Internet of Things (IoT) architecture that comprises of devices, network, compute, storage, platform, applications along with management and security components with focus on the missing functionality in the current state of the art. As with the first edition, it is organized into six main an IoT reference model; Fog computing and the drivers; IoT management and applications ranging from smart homes to manufacturing and energy conservation solutions; Smart Services in IoT; IoT standards; and case studies. The textbook edition features a new chapter entitled The Blockchain in IoT, updates based on latest standards and technologies, and new slide ware for professors. It features a full suite of classroom material for easy adoption.

403 pages, Hardcover

Published November 23, 2018

2 people are currently reading
19 people want to read

About the author

Ammar Rayes

8 books

Ratings & Reviews

What do you think?
Rate this book

Friends & Following

Create a free account to discover what your friends think of this book!

Community Reviews

5 stars
0 (0%)
4 stars
1 (16%)
3 stars
2 (33%)
2 stars
1 (16%)
1 star
2 (33%)
Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews
Profile Image for Siarhei.
91 reviews6 followers
May 5, 2020
The only thing I've learned from this book is that: Cisco estimates that there will be 20-26 billion devices connected to the Internet by 2020. Authors repeat that phrase throughout the book! That is understandable, as the book is written by Cisco-affiliated men. And almost half of the book is about networks, not about sensors, actuators, control systems, monitoring, data analysis and all that interesting stuff you'd expect to hear about IoT. And by networks they mean mostly TCP/IP and Cisco routers, not BLE, ZigBee, Z-Wave and other interesting technologies (though they touch them slightly a few times). I know that it's incorrect to compare TCP/IP and wireless technologies as they belong to different OSI levels (and, yes, there is a section about OSI model in this book), but what I want to say is that I'd expect far more broad overview of different communication technologies and styles instead of concentrating on a single one.

Actually, there is one chapter about "things" (followed again by 2.5 chapters of networks and TCP/IP).

After the "networks half" of the book ends, the "sundries half" begins.

There is a superficial chapter about security (a joke about "S" letter in "IoT" goes here). And there is a chapter about IoT markets. And there is a chapter about blockchain (probably it's goal is to acquit the word "hype" in the title of the book). Was it really necessary to speak about blockchain and markets in a book about IoT? I think it's a waste of paper.

TLDR: I expected this book to be far more entertaining and informative.

P.S. Did I forget to mention Cisco in my review? Good, good, I didn't!
55 reviews
October 18, 2017
Textbook that is riddled with grammatical errors, typos, jargon and poorly cited examples. Quite embarrassing for a university level publication, given that a simple proofreading before publishing might have fixed most of these. The index is also unusable because more often than not it doesn't reference the correct pages and the few times I needed to use the glossary, the terms I was looking for weren't there. I guess there aren't too many books yet on the subject but I'd really recipe waiting for the next edition unless you're reading it as a text. The electronic version offered by Springer is cost prohibitive, there is no audio version and the teaching slides and problem questions weren't of great quality. you know it's not great when you find yourself seeking better explanations on Wikipedia.

This book was written by Cisco people so much of it leans toward a Cisco view of the concepts. would be better to see more vendor neutral perspective of the industry.

Overly technical in parts, not really suitable as an introductory text unless you have some existing knowledge of networking concepts. would probably have benefited from some input from outside the IT industry.

Seems to have potential as reference material just not a great personal experience. Fortunately I had a good lecturer who was able to adapt to the material to make it more palatable.
Profile Image for Billal Teiba.
33 reviews
March 30, 2020
Some parts of the book were really insightful whereas some were boring. The whole idea of this kind of these short books is not to delve into technical details. Trying to depict some aspects was unnecessary.
Definitely needs revision due to lack of good sentence structure and some typos.
Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews

Can't find what you're looking for?

Get help and learn more about the design.