Book Image

Practical Internet of Things with JavaScript

By : Arvind Ravulavaru
Book Image

Practical Internet of Things with JavaScript

By: Arvind Ravulavaru

Overview of this book

In this world of technology upgrades, IoT is currently leading with its promise to make the world a more smarter and efficient place. This book will show you how to build simple IoT solutions that will help you to understand how this technology works. We would not only explore the IoT solution stack, but we will also see how to do it with the world’s most misunderstood programming language - JavaScript. Using Raspberry Pi 3 and JavaScript (ES5/ES6) as the base to build all the projects, you will begin with learning about the fundamentals of IoT and then build a standard framework for developing all the applications covered in this book. You will then move on to build a weather station with temperature, humidity and moisture sensors and further integrate Alexa with it. Further, you will build a smart wearable for understanding the concept of fall detection. You will then extend it with the 'If This Then That' (IFTTT) rules engine to send an email on fall detection. Finally, you will be working with the Raspberry Pi 3 camera module and surveillance with a bit of facial detection using Amazon Rekognition platform. At the end of the book, you will not only be able to build standalone exciting IoT applications but also learn how you can extend your projects to another level.
Table of Contents (17 chapters)
Title Page
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewer
www.PacktPub.com
Customer Feedback
Dedication
Preface

Summary


In this chapter, we have seen how to set up a smart surveillance system with Raspberry Pi and the AWS Rekognition platform.

We started by understanding the AWS Rekognition platform and then indexing/seeding a collection with our images. Next, we updated the Raspberry Pi code to take a picture when motion is detected and then send that image to AWS Rekognition to identify whether the face in the current photo matches any of the indexed images. If it does, we ignore the image; if it does not, we send an email with that image.

With this, we complete, Practical Internet of Things with JavaScript. I hope you have learned a few ways to leverage JavaScript and Raspberry Pi to build simple yet powerful IoT solutions.