It's technical and live coding talk that I delivered on Bandung Digital Valley's TechThursday program. In which I discuss deeply about ESP8266 development, Azure IoT Hub cloud and DycodeX's iothub.id cloud, and working with HomeKit framework on iOS and integration with Siri.
37. Designed for IoT
Connectivity, Security & Management for billions of devices
Service Assisted Communications
Devices are not servers
Use IoT Hub to enable secure bi-directional communications
Cloud Scale Messaging
Device-to-cloud and Cloud-to-device
Durable message inbox/outbox per device
Monitor Devices
Delivery receipts, expired messages
Device communication errors
Per-Device Authentication
Individual device identities and credentials
Connection Multiplexing
Single device-cloud connection for all communications
(device-to-cloud, cloud-to-device)
Multi-Protocol
Natively supports AMQPS, HTTPS, MQTT
Extensible protocol support for custom protocol needs
Multi-Platform
Device SDKs available for multiple platforms: RTOS, Linux, Windows,
iOS, Android
Service SDK supports multiple languages (Node, Java, C#)
Azure IoT Hub
38. • Blog article: http://aka.ms/azureiotdevintro
• Azure IoT dev center: http://aka.ms/azureiotdev
• GitHub repo: http://github.com/azure/azure-iot-sdks
• Watch Build 2016 videos on Channel 9
More about Azure IoT Hub
41. Dycodex’s iothub.id Cloud
We’ve been using it internally, heavily during learning & prototyping.
Then we decided to make it available for everyone.
68. • IoT communities on Facebook:
IoT Geek Surabaya, IoT for Bandung, Arduino
Indonesia, Raspberry Indonesia, IoT Indonesia,
Indonesia IoT Connect, ESP8266 Indonesia
• Connect your things: http://iothub.id
• Professional training: http://edu.dycode.co.id
• DycodeX’s IoT products: http://dycodex.com
Call to Action
69. Thanks!
Andri Yadi
Email — a at dycode dot com
twitter — @andri_yadi
www — andriyadi.me
github — github.com/andriyadi