Book Image

Analytics for the Internet of Things (IoT)

By : Andrew Minteer
5 (1)
Book Image

Analytics for the Internet of Things (IoT)

5 (1)
By: Andrew Minteer

Overview of this book

We start with the perplexing task of extracting value from huge amounts of barely intelligible data. The data takes a convoluted route just to be on the servers for analysis, but insights can emerge through visualization and statistical modeling techniques. You will learn to extract value from IoT big data using multiple analytic techniques. Next we review how IoT devices generate data and how the information travels over networks. You’ll get to know strategies to collect and store the data to optimize the potential for analytics, and strategies to handle data quality concerns. Cloud resources are a great match for IoT analytics, so Amazon Web Services, Microsoft Azure, and PTC ThingWorx are reviewed in detail next. Geospatial analytics is then introduced as a way to leverage location information. Combining IoT data with environmental data is also discussed as a way to enhance predictive capability. We’ll also review the economics of IoT analytics and you’ll discover ways to optimize business value. By the end of the book, you’ll know how to handle scale for both data storage and analytics, how Apache Spark can be leveraged to handle scalability, and how R and Python can be used for analytic modeling.
Table of Contents (20 chapters)
Title Page
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewer
www.PacktPub.com
Customer Feedback
Preface

Chapter 8. Communicating with Others - Visualization and Dashboarding

It has been a few months since your analysis prevented the bright pink thermostat cover debacle. Your boss has been promoted to Director, IoT Analytics due to his leadership in developing the capability to use IoT field data to answer business questions. You, however, have the same job just more responsibilities.

Your analytics is being used throughout the company. You are excited about it, but are now spending a lot of time pulling together standard reporting to be sent to various groups every week.

"Klineman in Finance wants to see the active devices trend chart you do, but he wants it in a table. I don't know why, but can you do a version like that for him?" your boss asks with an upbeat tone in his voice. He seems to get happier the more charts and graphs that people want. You get busier and busier.

"Okay, that's it!" you say as your anger slips out, "They need to get their own charts somehow. I can't handle all these...