Terms Glossary F Fog Computing
Edit This Term Record

Fog Computing

Fog computing is a term created by Cisco that refers to extending cloud computing to the edge of an enterprise's network. In a fog computing environment, much of the processing takes place in a data hub on a smart mobile device or the edge of the network in a smart router or other gateway devices.
Read More
Cisco introduced its fog computing vision in January 2014 as a way of bringing cloud computing capabilities to the edge of the network and as a result, closer to the rapidly growing number of connected devices and applications that consume cloud services and generate increasingly massive amounts of data. The goal of fogging is to improve efficiency and reduce the amount of data that needs to be transported to the cloud for data processing, analysis and storage. This is often done for efficiency reasons, but it may also be carried out for security and compliance reasons. In a fog computing environment, much of the processing takes place in a data hub on a smart mobile device or on the edge of the network in a smart router or other gateway device. This distributed approach is growing in popularity because of the Internet of Things (IoT) and the immense amount of data that sensors generate.
Read More
FreeWave Technologies
FreeWave Technologies
With over 20 years of RF innovation under its belt, FreeWave is the undisputed leader in military unmanned systems and industrial wireless. Millions of our best-in-class, outdoor, ruggedized radios have seen action in some of the harshest and most dangerous places in the world. Our new Industrial IoT (IIoT) programmable radio platform makes Fog Computing, M2M and the Intelligent IIoT a reality. Contact us today to learn how the ZumIQ platform transforms Process Control and Industrial Automation. If it’s mission-critical intelligent wireless, it’s FreeWave.
test test