Kevin Ashton

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Kevin Ashton
Kevin Ashton 2015.jpg
Ashton at the 2015 Texas Book Festival.
Born 1968
Birmingham, England
Nationality British

Kevin Ashton (born 1968) is a British technology pioneer who cofounded the Auto-ID Center at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), which created a global standard system for RFID and other sensors.[1] He is known for inventing the term "the Internet of Things" to describe a system where the Internet is connected to the physical world via ubiquitous sensors.[2][3]

Ashton was born in Birmingham, UK. He was working as an assistant brand manager at Procter & Gamble (P&G) in 1997 when he became interested in using RFID to help manage P&G's supply chain.[1] This work led him to MIT, where he helped start an RFID research consortium called the Auto-ID Center with professors Sanjay Sarma and Sunny Siu and researcher David Brock. The center opened in 1999 as an industry sponsored research project with the goal of creating a global open standard system to put RFID everywhere. Ashton was the Center's Executive Director. Siu, then Sarma, acted as Research Director, later Chairman of Research. Under Ashton and Sarma's leadership, the number of sponsors grew to 103, and additional labs were funded at other major universities around the world. Once the system was developed, MIT licensed it to not-for-profit standards body GS1 and the project reached a successful conclusion. The labs were renamed Auto-ID Labs and continue their research.

Ashton became a high-tech entrepreneur with start-ups ThingMagic,[4] cleantech company EnerNOC (NASDAQ:ENOC) and Zensi, an energy sensing company he founded with Shwetak Patel among others. Zensi was acquired by Belkin International in April 2010.[5] Ashton then developed and launched the Belkin WeMo home automation system. He writes for RFID Journal, Medium and Quartz, and has a book deal with Random House.

For an April 2013 Quartz article Ashton created Santiago Swallow, a fictional Mexican social media guru who specializes in the "imagined self", the fictional expert was furnished with 90,000 paid-for Twitter followers and a Wikipedia biography. The creation of Swallow is an attempt to show that credibility is unrelated to having a large number of Twitter followers.[6]

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 Wired Magazine, July 2004
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  3. Kevin Ashton, "That 'Internet of Things' Thing", RFID Journal, 22 June 2009.
  4. RFID Journal 2004
  5. GigaOm, April 2010
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External links