Do you want to become involved in the Internet of Things but aren't sure where to begin? Microsoft has created a fun and free game exclusively for you. We'll let you know about their fresh new online IoT beginner's programme. We'll go through the new curriculum for IoT novices in this article.
Intro IoT "Internet of Things"
IoT — the Internet of Things — is one of the most rapidly growing areas of technology, and it excites me much. Start with a device like a Raspberry Pi, add some sensors, some code, and some cloud services, and voila! Smart cities, self-driving vehicles, automated farming, robotic supermarkets, and gadgets that clean your toilet when you yell at Alexa for the third time are all on the horizon.
It's a free, open source, university-level IoT curriculum created by IoT professionals, educators, and students for tutors and learners.
What will you discover?
The courses are organised into projects that you can create with a Raspberry Pi to help you delve further into IoT use cases, such as tracking food from farm to table.
You'll create projects while learning about IoT devices, sensors, actuators, and the cloud, such as:
A soil moisture sensor controls a relay in this automatic watering system. This begins on your device alone, then progresses to a free MQTT broker to enable cloud management. It then moves on to cloud-based IoT services, where it adds security safeguards to prevent Farmer Giles from hacking your irrigation system.
.@sb_ltd's latest board looks to get your @Raspberry_Pi Pico project online via 2G cellular: https://t.co/3RmygznokT pic.twitter.com/rorClyrGng
— Hackster.io (@Hacksterio) July 26, 2021
The route followed by a GPS-based car tracker is shown on a map. Using cloud-based mapping services and serverless programming, you may receive notifications when a truck carrying food arrives at a certain place.
Checking the quality of fruits using AI using your device's camera. You train AI models to determine whether or not fruit is ripe. These begin in the cloud and are then moved to the edge, where they are run directly on your Raspberry Pi.
Smart stock checking, driven by AI services, so you can see when you need to restock the shelves.
A voice-activated smart timer, so you'll have more devices to yell at when cooking! This one makes use of artificial intelligence (AI) to comprehend what you're saying to your IoT gadget. It provides spoken input and may operate in a variety of languages, translating on the fly.
Start creating with your Raspberry Pi. Please meet IoT For Beginners: A Curriculum without further ado!
Visit Here: https://github.com/microsoft/IoT-For-Beginners
Posts You May like:
- First-Ever 2G Expansion Board for Raspberry Pi Pico has Launched on Kickstarter
- Quick Guide for Raspberry Pi Users: Raspberry Pi Terminal Commands
- Windows 11 on Raspberry Pi Devices in Easy Installation Guide
- Get Your Project Done by Raspberry Pi Approved Design Partners
- PiRelay 8 Smart Relay Board for Raspberry Pi - Kickstarter
- Tiny Round/Circular LCD Display Launched!
- Issue Fixed! USB Boot Ubuntu Server 20.04 on Raspberry Pi 4
- HC-SR04 Sensor with micro-ROS on the Raspberry Pi Pico
- Raspberry Pi Pico: ADC Sampling and FFT
- Using CircuitPython for RP2040
- How to Setup Pico RP2040 on Windows
- Using micro-ROS on the Raspberry Pi Pico
- LED Tricks Using The Raspberry Pi Pico
- The RP2040 Raspberry Pi Pico Meets LoRa
- Pico supports SD cards and FatFS
- How to connect a Raspberry Pi Pico to LoRaWAN
- 50 Raspberry Pi Hacks & Tips You Should Know
- How to Install Wi-Fi and Internet on a Raspberry Pi Pico