There’s clearly a lot of excitement concerning the business potential
of everything and almost anything relating to the Internet of Things
(IoT). Less appreciated, however, is the fact that an IoT project is
arguably going to be the most complex distributed computing project any
IT organization is likely to ever embark on.
Aiming to simplify pushing compute, storage and network out to the edge of an IoT environment, Vapor IO today unveiled a Vapor Edge platform
that makes it simpler to process data on an IoT gateway as opposed to
having to constantly transfer data back to a central data center.
Vapor IO CEO Cole Crawford says Vapor Edge is a hardened physical
appliance that in addition to being able to host an application
workload, allows programmatically configuring a wireless mesh network.
Running on that appliance is an instance of the open source Open Data Center Run Time Environment (OpenDCRE) software
that is managed by Vapor CORE remote monitoring software. There’s also
Vapor Compass software that provides the mechanism for pushing workloads
out to the Vapor Edge appliance in the first place.
While not every IoT application requires a lot of compute power at
the edge, Crawford says it’s already apparent that advanced applications
involving self-driving cars and various forms of augmented and virtual reality
most certainly will need access to low-latency compute engine deployed
as close as possible to where an application is being consumed.
“I call these industrial IoT applications,” says Crawford
Thursday, 17 November 2016
Vapor IO Pushes Compute to the IoT Edge
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