Smart Energy uses schedule negotiation and schedule coordination to operate systems and equipment at the right time to take maximum advantage of variable energy supplies. As the internet of things grows up, it will move from gathering data from sensors to coordinating things to enhance our lives. The future of business breaks down into smaller entities with stronger missions that coordinate activities over time to support customers as if by a single business, only better. We all took steps closer to these seemingly simple coordination results, at a meeting at AOL headquarters.
Energy
Work Plan for oBIX 2.0
Some of you know that the oBIX Committee (open Building Information Exchange) is meeting again. The work is moving ahead on multiple fronts. We have separated encodings (XML and COAP) from the core specification. We are working on separate transport specifications for SOAP and REST (including JSON). We are doing a refresh of the core specification for consistency and conformance. I am most excited, however about the oBIX 2.0, the enterprise services.
The core specification (1.x) requires each oBIX server to provide a lobby. Clients can ask the server what is in the lobby, and thereby discover how to interact with the system behind that server. Contracts are special purpose agreements...
Energy and the Microsoft ROC
Yesterday I had the pleasure of a tour Darrell Smith, Director of Microsoft Facilities & Energy, of the Redmond Operations Center (ROC). Facilities & Energy provides internal support; it is not a product line. The ROC applies Big Data to the operations of buildings on Microsoft’s home campus. In concept, the ROC is much like the Enterprise Building Management System (EBMS) at the University of North Carolina that I have written of. The results at Microsoft, though, are much more successful.
Darrel avoided the trap that we fell into at UNC,...
Easy integration of the Internet with Things: Calendar Subscription and Syndication
I use Outlook in my day to day life. It shows me an aggregate calendar, with meetings I accept at UNC (one account) meetings I accept not at UNC (anther email account) and two corporate calendars: one based in Exchange, and one in SharePoint. When I was working on the national smart grid roadmap, my Outlook showed the calendar of that SharePoint project as well. In Outlook, I can turn each calendar off or on, and when aggregated, each appointment was a different color by source. I live by Calendar aggregation.
In my Phone, which happens to be an Android, I used to have...