• A
  • A
  • A
  • ABC
  • ABC
  • ABC
  • А
  • А
  • А
  • А
  • А
Regular version of the site

Development of Predictive Climate Control Module using IoT Technologies

Student: Lipin Vyacheslav

Supervisor: Aleksey Kychkin

Faculty: Faculty of Economics, Management, and Business Informatics

Educational Programme: Software Engineering (Bachelor)

Year of Graduation: 2020

This paper describes the development of a module that allows for predictive room climate control using the Internet of Things concept. The work consists of three chapters. The first chapter describes the analysis of the climate control area, an overview of the solutions available on the market, and a description of the requirements for the system being created. The second chapter describes the module architecture design process and selects possible solution algorithms. The third chapter contains details of the implementation of various parts of the module, including the integration of the system for drawing Grafana charts, in addition, the chapter describes the process of deployment. The work contains 3 chapters, 42 pages, 10 illustrations, 18 tables, 3 applications. Department of Information Technology in Business 2020.

Student Theses at HSE must be completed in accordance with the University Rules and regulations specified by each educational programme.

Summaries of all theses must be published and made freely available on the HSE website.

The full text of a thesis can be published in open access on the HSE website only if the authoring student (copyright holder) agrees, or, if the thesis was written by a team of students, if all the co-authors (copyright holders) agree. After a thesis is published on the HSE website, it obtains the status of an online publication.

Student theses are objects of copyright and their use is subject to limitations in accordance with the Russian Federation’s law on intellectual property.

In the event that a thesis is quoted or otherwise used, reference to the author’s name and the source of quotation is required.

Search all student theses