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The recent development in wireless networks and devices has led to novel services that will utilize wireless communication on a new level. Much effort and resources have been dedicated to establishing new communication networks that will support machine-to-machine communication and the Internet of Things (IoT). In these systems, various smart and sensory devices are deployed and connected, enabling large amounts of data to be streamed. Smart services represent new trends in mobile services, i.e., a completely new spectrum of context-aware, personalized, and intelligent services and applications. A variety of existing services utilize information about the position of the user or mobile device. The position of mobile devices is often achieved using the Global Navigation Satellite System (GNSS) chips that are integrated into all modern mobile devices (smartphones). However, GNSS is not always a reliable source of position estimates due to multipath propagation and signal blockage. Moreover, integrating GNSS chips into all devices might have a negative impact on the battery life of future IoT applications. Therefore, alternative solutions to position estimation should be investigated and implemented in IoT applications. This Special Issue, “Smart Sensor Technologies for IoT” aims to report on some of the recent research efforts on this increasingly important topic. The twelve accepted papers in this issue cover various aspects of Smart Sensor Technologies for IoT.
Technology: general issues --- Internet of Things (IoT) --- ReRoute --- Multicast Repair (M-REP) --- internet of things (IoT) --- Fast Reroute --- bit repair (B-REP) --- failure repair --- WSN --- MANET --- DRONET --- multilayered network model --- 5G --- IoT --- smart sensors --- smart sensor --- IoT system --- Velostat --- pressure sensor --- convolutional neural network --- data classification --- position detection --- magnetometer --- traffic --- vehicle --- classification --- measurement --- detection --- Internet of Things --- Bluetooth --- indoor tracking --- mobile localization --- optical sensors --- vibration sensing --- quality of service differentiation --- wireless optical networks --- free space optics --- multiwavelength laser --- optical code division multiple access (OCDMA) --- underwater wireless sensor network --- energy-efficient --- clustering --- depth-based routing --- mm-wave radars --- GNSS-RTK positioning --- wireless technology --- electromagnetic scanning --- point cloud --- localization --- IMU --- Wi-Fi --- positioning --- dead reckoning --- particle filter --- fingerprinting --- Wi-Fi sensing --- human activity recognition --- location-independent --- meta learning --- metric learning --- few-shot learning --- ACR --- H.264/AVC --- H.265/HEVC --- QoE --- subjective assessment --- n/a
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""The World Is Our Classroom" explores parenting during the rise of "worldschooling.""--
Students --- Education --- Non-formal education. --- International education. --- Education and globalization. --- Travel. --- Parent participation. --- ADD/ADHD. --- Alternative Education. --- Alternative Mobility Futures. --- Autonomobility. --- Come-and-Go Sociality. --- Comfort Zone. --- Commodification. --- Commodified Community. --- Compassion. --- Creativity. --- Cultivated Independence. --- Cultural Capital. --- Digital Nomadism. --- Digital Nomads. --- Disruption. --- Educational Travel. --- Emotion Work. --- Emotion. --- Emotional Curriculum. --- Entitlement. --- Entrepreneurial Self. --- Entrepreneurialism. --- Ethics. --- Existential Mobility. --- Extreme Parenting. --- Family as Enterprise. --- Fear. --- Feeling Global. --- Free-Range Parenting. --- Future. --- Global Citizenship. --- Good Life. --- Good Mobile Life. --- Good Risk. --- Hackschooling. --- Helicopter Parenting. --- Homeschooling. --- Homesickness. --- Intensive Mothering. --- Late Modernity. --- Life Politics. --- Lifestyle Mobilities. --- Location-Independent Lifestyles. --- Mobile Commons. --- Mobile Community. --- Mobile Elite. --- Mobile Families. --- Mobile Lifestyles. --- Mobile Virtual Ethnography. --- Mobilities. --- Mobility Justice. --- Neoliberal Society. --- Neoliberalism. --- New Individualism. --- New Togetherness. --- Nomadic Friendship. --- Parenting Cultures. --- Precariat. --- Precarity. --- Privilege. --- Public Education. --- Risk Society. --- Social Inequalities. --- Teenagers. --- Twenty-First Century Skills. --- Uncertain Times. --- Unschooling. --- Volunteer Tourism. --- Worldschooling. --- Youth Mobilities.
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The recent development in wireless networks and devices has led to novel services that will utilize wireless communication on a new level. Much effort and resources have been dedicated to establishing new communication networks that will support machine-to-machine communication and the Internet of Things (IoT). In these systems, various smart and sensory devices are deployed and connected, enabling large amounts of data to be streamed. Smart services represent new trends in mobile services, i.e., a completely new spectrum of context-aware, personalized, and intelligent services and applications. A variety of existing services utilize information about the position of the user or mobile device. The position of mobile devices is often achieved using the Global Navigation Satellite System (GNSS) chips that are integrated into all modern mobile devices (smartphones). However, GNSS is not always a reliable source of position estimates due to multipath propagation and signal blockage. Moreover, integrating GNSS chips into all devices might have a negative impact on the battery life of future IoT applications. Therefore, alternative solutions to position estimation should be investigated and implemented in IoT applications. This Special Issue, “Smart Sensor Technologies for IoT” aims to report on some of the recent research efforts on this increasingly important topic. The twelve accepted papers in this issue cover various aspects of Smart Sensor Technologies for IoT.
Internet of Things (IoT) --- ReRoute --- Multicast Repair (M-REP) --- internet of things (IoT) --- Fast Reroute --- bit repair (B-REP) --- failure repair --- WSN --- MANET --- DRONET --- multilayered network model --- 5G --- IoT --- smart sensors --- smart sensor --- IoT system --- Velostat --- pressure sensor --- convolutional neural network --- data classification --- position detection --- magnetometer --- traffic --- vehicle --- classification --- measurement --- detection --- Internet of Things --- Bluetooth --- indoor tracking --- mobile localization --- optical sensors --- vibration sensing --- quality of service differentiation --- wireless optical networks --- free space optics --- multiwavelength laser --- optical code division multiple access (OCDMA) --- underwater wireless sensor network --- energy-efficient --- clustering --- depth-based routing --- mm-wave radars --- GNSS-RTK positioning --- wireless technology --- electromagnetic scanning --- point cloud --- localization --- IMU --- Wi-Fi --- positioning --- dead reckoning --- particle filter --- fingerprinting --- Wi-Fi sensing --- human activity recognition --- location-independent --- meta learning --- metric learning --- few-shot learning --- ACR --- H.264/AVC --- H.265/HEVC --- QoE --- subjective assessment --- n/a
Choose an application
The recent development in wireless networks and devices has led to novel services that will utilize wireless communication on a new level. Much effort and resources have been dedicated to establishing new communication networks that will support machine-to-machine communication and the Internet of Things (IoT). In these systems, various smart and sensory devices are deployed and connected, enabling large amounts of data to be streamed. Smart services represent new trends in mobile services, i.e., a completely new spectrum of context-aware, personalized, and intelligent services and applications. A variety of existing services utilize information about the position of the user or mobile device. The position of mobile devices is often achieved using the Global Navigation Satellite System (GNSS) chips that are integrated into all modern mobile devices (smartphones). However, GNSS is not always a reliable source of position estimates due to multipath propagation and signal blockage. Moreover, integrating GNSS chips into all devices might have a negative impact on the battery life of future IoT applications. Therefore, alternative solutions to position estimation should be investigated and implemented in IoT applications. This Special Issue, “Smart Sensor Technologies for IoT” aims to report on some of the recent research efforts on this increasingly important topic. The twelve accepted papers in this issue cover various aspects of Smart Sensor Technologies for IoT.
Technology: general issues --- Internet of Things (IoT) --- ReRoute --- Multicast Repair (M-REP) --- internet of things (IoT) --- Fast Reroute --- bit repair (B-REP) --- failure repair --- WSN --- MANET --- DRONET --- multilayered network model --- 5G --- IoT --- smart sensors --- smart sensor --- IoT system --- Velostat --- pressure sensor --- convolutional neural network --- data classification --- position detection --- magnetometer --- traffic --- vehicle --- classification --- measurement --- detection --- Internet of Things --- Bluetooth --- indoor tracking --- mobile localization --- optical sensors --- vibration sensing --- quality of service differentiation --- wireless optical networks --- free space optics --- multiwavelength laser --- optical code division multiple access (OCDMA) --- underwater wireless sensor network --- energy-efficient --- clustering --- depth-based routing --- mm-wave radars --- GNSS-RTK positioning --- wireless technology --- electromagnetic scanning --- point cloud --- localization --- IMU --- Wi-Fi --- positioning --- dead reckoning --- particle filter --- fingerprinting --- Wi-Fi sensing --- human activity recognition --- location-independent --- meta learning --- metric learning --- few-shot learning --- ACR --- H.264/AVC --- H.265/HEVC --- QoE --- subjective assessment
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