José A. González
Madrid
Sunday, January 21, 2018, 8:26 AM
The mobile connected to television, television connected to the laptop, the laptop to the fridge, the fridge to the tablet and this to the vacuum cleaner. With a simple device you can operate the entire house and make it intelligent.
This connection is the famous Internet of Things (IoT). A new way to connect the world that gradually opens Hollow on the international market to achieving a growth rate of 32% in 2021, according to a Technovio Report, a research agency for technology.
“A tsunami that if you don’t surf you,” says Manuel Muñiz-Morell, CEO of Mioti, the first school that focuses on studying the IoT. The investment in Spain on the internet of things will reach nearly 23,000 million euros in 2020, which, according to the Technological Consultant IDC, represents 70% more than the 13,500 million euros that will be involved in 2017.
Spanish companies claim to reduce operational costs (24%) as the most important points in favor of using IoT Technologies Process Automation (26%) and improve the customer experience (23%).
“In Spain, the IoT is very braking, because so far no talent was willing to explode it”
However, many organizations acknowledge that they find problems to tackle these types of initiatives, such as initial costs (29%), security -related care (25%) and privacy problems (17%).
“In Spain, the internet of things is very braking, because there is no talent willing to exploit it,” says Muñiz. This is why the first school that is only devoted to IoT was born and is based in Madrid: “There is no equal in the world,” he says.
IoT University in Madrid.
O. Chamorro

The institute has formed teaching staff by selected professionals from leading companies in IoT. “We are born with the calling of learning something new in a new way. The knowledge cycle is increasingly shorter,” explains the CEO of Mioti. His academic council is composed of renowned members of the international and educational community.
A future school
Among them, the names of Blanca Gómez, talent director of Microsoft; Adam Sedow, Chief of Education or Facebook; Alicia Asín, CEO of Libelium; Or Court Chilton from MIT. “What is being done in Mioti are real cases from day to day and we will do it with leading companies,” explains Muñiz.
Poonteras technology that will seek talent in the more than 5,000 square meters of Myti facilities in Madrid. Theceebeub will be the house that this pioneering institute ends and “Avant -Garde facilities has the latest technological progress in connected devices, artificial intelligence and IoT communication are available to students and companies.”
“If you learn about the future, the building must be a loyal reflection of what you teach,” the CEO explains. Under its walls, the future school has five laboratories for learning the latest technologies in “Smart Cities”, “Smart Home”, autonomous cars, IoT industry and “smart health”.
With the return to school already in the backpacks, Mioti opens its doors in facilities of more than 5,000 square meters on the outskirts of Madrid. The first floor of Thecube is for this new university. “It is a double challenge because it is a non -game and has created ad hoc infrastructure for these studies.”
Mioti has already engaged his machines and his experts occupied their offices in these avant -garde facilities. The first academic steps will be aimed at various three -months modules “aimed at professionals looking for the skills and skills needed to develop a lasting impact on the new IoT ecosystem,” they explain.
Courses for 3,500 euros
Data Science, IoT ecosystem and the things are the first courses that students receive in exchange for 3,500 euros. To lead in 2018 with the nine months IoT Master with a price of 9,500 euros. While the opening of the doors arrived, MyTi experts have taught company meminars focused on this area of technology, specific education because “people must be aware of the company’s different layers. Everyone must be aware of the IoT potential to allocate resources,” says Muñiz, CEO of Mioti.
A company focused on the company to “renew the Iot Tsunami and not to lose,” he explains. Although the profile of the new students is ‘fairly young and very diversity’. “We have recently graduates in technical studies and, also business students who want to train in technology,” says Muñiz. But above all, most new students have a rule: “Want to learn something new and become a member of the IoT Tsunami,” says the CEO of the First IoT School in Spain.