By J. BONASIA AND DOUG TSURUOKA
Tiny sensors are being tapped to monitor building controls, pipelines, factory equipment and drug-making processes.
News Coverage 2008
In today's 'On America' segment, CNBC's Mike Hegedus travels to Hayward, Calif., to look at...dust. ![]()
Exciting working systems have recently become available from companies such as Dust Networks...
To Chevron, technology creates opportunity and a sound technology strategy forms the basis for their business planning...
Wes Iversen, Managing Editor
Interview with University of California at Berkeley Professor Kris Pister, Ph.D., who is generally credited as the inventor of “Smart Dust” technology.
Automation World
Wes Iversen, Managing Editor
Dr. Kris Pister, wireless sensor networking pioneer, gave the opening day keynote address at ISAExpo 2008.
Automation World
To Chevron, technology creates opportunity and a sound technology strategy forms the basis for their business planning...
A biological specimen storage application shows how wireless sensor networks can be used to monitor large facilities with critical items that need constant care and produce copious amounts of data.
Steve Toteda
Die zeitsynchronisierte drahtlose Mesh-Netzwerktechnologie – Grundlage des WirelessHART-Standards – zeichnet sich hier durch einen zuverlässigen und stabilen Betrieb sowie unkompliziertes Management aus.
Elektronik Praxis
Tom Inglesby
How does ZigBee measure up to today’s other low-power wireless sensor networking options? As always, “It depends.”
M2M
Ellen Fussell Policastro
Continuous optimization throughout the mesh network is the key to high reliability.
InTech
Ellen Fussell Policastro
At the ISA EXPO in Houston, Pister will talk about how wireless sensor networks have advanced in the past few years.
InTech
Steve Toteda
The information you need to run your industrial plant more safely and efficiently is all around you; the challenge is getting access to it in a reliable, cost-effective way.
ISA InTech
Harry Forbes, Senior Analyst, ARC Advisory Group
Several major suppliers have commercialized new wireless ECM offerings.
Power Engineering
Ellen Fussell Policastro
Wireless sensor networks will allow people to get all the sensor data they want without the cost of installing wire.
ISA InTech
Mark T. Hoske, editor in chief
Application advice from six industrial or rugged wireless applications follow including Emerson Process Management, Fisher BioServices, Dust Networks, General Electric, and others.
Control Engineering
Mark T. Hoske
This primer helps with wireless sensor technology selection.
Control Engineering
San Francisco will plant wireless sensors in 6,000 of its 24,000-metered parking spaces. They will announce, via the web, cell phone, and signage which of the spaces are free at any moment.
ISA InTech
Fisher BioServices used monitoring systems with General Electric Wireless Mesh to meet stringent U.S. FDA (Food & Drug Administration) regulations.
Control Engineering
