The Internet of Things

As part of an effort to generate 'Internet of Things' technologies, Google is 
awarding grants to facilitate pioneering research in this nascent field of 
computing.

"While the Internet of Things (IoT) conjures a vision of 'anytime, any place' 
connectivity for all things, the realization is complex given the need to work 
across interconnected and heterogeneous systems, and the special considerations 
needed for security, privacy, and safety," co-wrote Google chief Internet 
evangelist Vint Cerf, in a blog post announcing the research program.

 
http://googleresearch.blogspot.co.uk/2014/12/call-for-research-proposals-to.html

The "Internet of Things" is technical shorthand describing what is expected to 
be a mass wave of portable devices and sensors that will gather information and 
send it over the Internet for purposes of analysis and monitoring. 

Over 50 billion things will be connected to the Internet by 2020, Cisco has 
estimated.

Google plans to issue two sets of awards, both meant to fuel work to be carried 
out over a year.

One set of grants will be for larger team projects that Google will pay between 
$500,000 and $800,000 to see completed. Google expects that the work could be 
undertaken either by an academician leading a team of researchers or by a 
graduate student "willing to dedicate a substantial portion of their research 
time to this expedition," according to Google's request for proposals document.

 https://drive.google.com/a/google.com/file/d/0B-ybA8_Lt-gwc2RUWnN5eFFoekE/view

A smaller set of grants, ranging from $50,000 to $150,000, will also be given 
out. For these grants, Google is looking for "new and unorthodox solutions" in 
user interface and application development, in privacy and security, and in 
systems and protocols research, according to the blog post.

Google itself continue to research IoT technologies as well, it said. In 
particular, it plans to expand IoT capabilities in products such as the Android 
mobile operating system, the Chrome browser, the Google Cloud Platform, and the 
Nest home connectivity service.

Submissions are due Jan. 21 and Google will announce the projects it selects 
within the following months. 

Cheers,
Stephen
.

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