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Analytics for the Internet of Things (IoT)

You're reading from   Analytics for the Internet of Things (IoT) Intelligent analytics for your intelligent devices

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jul 2017
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781787120730
Length 378 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Author (1):
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Andrew Minteer Andrew Minteer
Author Profile Icon Andrew Minteer
Andrew Minteer
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Table of Contents (14) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Defining IoT Analytics and Challenges 2. IoT Devices and Networking Protocols FREE CHAPTER 3. IoT Analytics for the Cloud 4. Creating an AWS Cloud Analytics Environment 5. Collecting All That Data - Strategies and Techniques 6. Getting to Know Your Data - Exploring IoT Data 7. Decorating Your Data - Adding External Datasets to Innovate 8. Communicating with Others - Visualization and Dashboarding 9. Applying Geospatial Analytics to IoT Data 10. Data Science for IoT Analytics 11. Strategies to Organize Data for Analytics 12. The Economics of IoT Analytics 13. Bringing It All Together

Forecasting using ARIMA

Sometimes, you will have the need to forecast future values of a time series. For example, this could be a requirement to estimate the next several months of active IoT devices; or, it could be a need to project the usage hours of remote oil well pumps. One of the most popular methods to forecast time series is AutoRegressive Integrated Moving Average (ARIMA).

ARIMA is not one model but a collection of related methods that attempt to describe autocorrelations in the data in order to forecast future values. ARIMA is a combination of moving average and autoregressive techniques. Autoregressive means that the forecasting of future values of a variable is based on the linear combination of the past values of variables.

ARIMA incorporates both trend and seasonality effects into future forecasts. It can model both seasonal and nonseasonal data with a range of...

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