A curated list of awesome Internet of Things projects, resources, hardware, software, protocols, and standards.
Awesome IoT is a curated GitHub repository that aggregates a vast collection of Internet of Things projects, tools, hardware, software, protocols, and learning resources. It serves as a centralized directory for developers and enthusiasts to discover and evaluate technologies across the entire IoT stack, from microcontrollers and sensors to cloud platforms and communication standards.
IoT developers, embedded systems engineers, makers, students, and researchers looking for a comprehensive reference to explore, compare, and select tools and technologies for building connected devices and solutions.
It saves significant research time by providing a meticulously organized, community-vetted list of resources, ensuring users can quickly find reliable, up-to-date information on hardware, software, and protocols without scouring scattered sources.
🤖 A curated list of awesome Internet of Things projects and resources.
Open-Awesome is built by the community, for the community. Submit a project, suggest an awesome list, or help improve the catalog on GitHub.
Follows the 'awesome list' philosophy with community vetting, ensuring high-quality and relevant resources as stated in the README, reducing noise from unreliable sources.
Aggregates hundreds of IoT projects across hardware, software, protocols, and standards in a single repository, making it a one-stop reference for diverse needs.
Maintained with build status badges and community contributions, as shown by the Travis CI integration, helping keep the list relatively current and evolving.
Clearly categorized into sections like Hardware, Software, and Protocols, with subcategories for easy navigation, saving time in research.
It's primarily a list of links without dynamic updates or guarantees of currency; users must manually check each resource for obsolescence or broken links.
Provides only brief descriptions and links, no comparative reviews, hands-on testing, or guidance on choosing between similar tools, leaving evaluation to the user.
Serves purely as a reference directory, offering no software tools, APIs, or interactive features to test or integrate the listed technologies directly.