Smart
Dust Aims To Monitor Everything
In the 1990s, a researcher named
Kris Pister
dreamed up a wild future in which
people
would sprinkle the Earth with
countless tiny
sensors, no larger than grains of
rice.
These "smart dust" particles, as
he called them, would monitor
everything,
acting like electronic nerve endings
for the
planet. Fitted with computing power,
sensing
equipment, wireless radios and long
battery
life, the smart dust would make
observations
and relay mountains of real-time
data about
people, cities and the natural
environment.
Now, a version of Pister's smart
dust
fantasy is starting to become
reality.
"It's exciting. It's been a long
time
coming," said Pister, a computing
professor at the University of
California,
Berkeley. "I coined the phrase 14
years
ago. So smart dust has taken a
while, but
it's finally here." Maybe not
exactly
how he envisioned it. But there has
been
progress. The latest news comes from
the
computer and printing company
Hewlett-Packard, which recently
announced
it's working on a project it calls
the
"Central Nervous System for the
Earth." In coming years, the company
plans to deploy a trillion sensors
all over
the planet.--
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