If you're planning to invest in connected devices, make sure your middleware and communications are up to snuff. In this case, we look a how to mix Camel with a Pi.
Feeling constrained by your heap? Want to store more elements in a collection than your memory can hold? Check out this project designed to handle big collections.
ClickHouse is an open source columnar database that promises fast scans that can be used for real-time queries. See how it works, complete with benchmarks against Spark.
Thingsboard is hard at work on a new open source gateway that should allow devs from hobbyists to IIoT specialists to connect to devices regardless of protocol.
Both CART and Random Forests help data scientists better understand algorithms and work with dirty data. However, they still have some key differences.
Sibanjan Das offers up a tutorial for building a web-based cluster and prediction analysis application through using R with the open source Shiny framework. Oh yeah, and he embedded the app directly into this DZone article... shine on you crazy data scientist.
Chatbots continue to work their way into ever-more solutions, but how should we evaluate their effectiveness? In this post we take a look at a potential framework for doing just that.
Let's look into the Apache Ignite Cluster Layer, a GitHub project that includes the basic building blocks needed to implement a proposed microservices-based architecture.
This post has everything you need to know about the efficiency of Apache Nutch and StormCrawler. Read on to find out more on the benchmark analysis and conclusion drawn from the study.
A look back at the tech of the 1980s reveals an important lesson: Just because you can connect devices doesn't mean you should. That has implications for IoT.
If you want to jam on a piano but don't have a keyboard, don't worry, you can make one yourself. This guide uses a NodeMcu and Ubidots to bring a piano to life.