Butgereit, LCoetzee, LHay, JHugo, JGush, Kim L2011-09-232011-09-232011-08Butgereit, L, Coetzee, L, Hay, J, et al. 2011. RSAWORKS: things that “Tweet” in South Africa. ICCIR 2011, International Conference on Computing and ICT Research. Kampala, Uganda, 7-9 August 2011, pp 11http://hdl.handle.net/10204/5175ICCIR 2011, International Conference on Computing and ICT Research. Kampala, Uganda, 7-9 August 2011The “Internet of Things” is the phenomenon of more and more “things” being connected to the Internet (as opposed to people getting connected to the Internet). Although the concept of “Internet of Things” includes bidirectional access (“things” giving information about themselves and people or software then controlling those “things”), creating “things” that “tweet” is a common first step in joining the growing “Internet of Things”. This paper discusses a project where researchers in South Africa attempted to get a wide variety of “things” to “tweet” there statuses automaticallyenInternet of thingsInternetSouth AfricaTweetsTwitterICCIR 2011ICT researchRSAWORKSRSAWORKS: things that “Tweet” in South AfricaConference PresentationButgereit, L., Coetzee, L., Hay, J., Hugo, J., & Gush, K. L. (2011). RSAWORKS: things that “Tweet” in South Africa. http://hdl.handle.net/10204/5175Butgereit, L, L Coetzee, J Hay, J Hugo, and Kim L Gush. "RSAWORKS: things that “Tweet” in South Africa." (2011): http://hdl.handle.net/10204/5175Butgereit L, Coetzee L, Hay J, Hugo J, Gush KL, RSAWORKS: things that “Tweet” in South Africa; 2011. http://hdl.handle.net/10204/5175 .TY - Conference Presentation AU - Butgereit, L AU - Coetzee, L AU - Hay, J AU - Hugo, J AU - Gush, Kim L AB - The “Internet of Things” is the phenomenon of more and more “things” being connected to the Internet (as opposed to people getting connected to the Internet). Although the concept of “Internet of Things” includes bidirectional access (“things” giving information about themselves and people or software then controlling those “things”), creating “things” that “tweet” is a common first step in joining the growing “Internet of Things”. This paper discusses a project where researchers in South Africa attempted to get a wide variety of “things” to “tweet” there statuses automatically DA - 2011-08 DB - ResearchSpace DP - CSIR KW - Internet of things KW - Internet KW - South Africa KW - Tweets KW - Twitter KW - ICCIR 2011 KW - ICT research KW - RSAWORKS LK - https://researchspace.csir.co.za PY - 2011 T1 - RSAWORKS: things that “Tweet” in South Africa TI - RSAWORKS: things that “Tweet” in South Africa UR - http://hdl.handle.net/10204/5175 ER -