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Meetup8 IoT trends 2016
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Transcript of Meetup8 IoT trends 2016
M E G A T R I S C O M P . L L C
IoT trends and technological solutions
2/6/2016
1
A brief summary about the role of developers, smart homes, wearable and connected cars.
Introduction
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Over the years, the predictions for growth in the Internet of Things and machine-to-machine markets have been staggering: • 2010, IBM: “A world of 1 trillion connected devices” by 2015. • 2011, Ericsson’s CEO, Hans Vestberg: “50 billion connected devices” by 2020. • 2013, ABI Research report: “30 billion” by 2020. • 2013, Morgan Stanley report: “75 billion devices connected to the IoT” by 2020. • 2014, an Intel infographic: “31 billion devices connected to Internet” by 2020. • 2014, ABI Research updated report: “41 billion active wireless connected devices” by 2020. • 2015, Gartner Research: “4.9 billion connected things in use in 2015 … and will reach 25 billion by 2020.”
Introduction
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Although the specific predictions and the numbers differ, what is remarkable is that the numbers predicted for 2020 have been consistently extremely high over the years. The markets are experiencing explosive growth around the world, and the numbers are still performing at what Gartner calls the “peak of inflated expectations” in its well-known “Hype Cycle” diagrams. The Gartner Hype Cycle showed the Internet of Things had hit the peak of this curve in 2014, so we appear to finally be moving beyond the hype into reality.
What we will talk about
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Battle of the Smart Home
Hubs
Developers are the new baseline
Wearable platforms
From Connected Car
to software-defined
transportation
Consumer and Enterprise technology converge
What we will talk about
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9
Battle of the Smart Home
Hubs
Developers are the new baseline
Wearable platforms
From Connected Car
to software-defined
transportation
Consumer and Enterprise technology converge
Smart Homes Key facts
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1. Platforms, not products, will determine who wins the customer relationship.
2. Conversational platforms (voice, chat) are coming up strong.
3. The rise of artificial intelligence fundamentally challenges the central role of developers as creators of use cases, but developers remain key in platform strategies, if not for apps, then for services.
What we will talk about
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Battle of the Smart Home
Hubs
Developers are the new baseline
Wearable platforms
From Connected Car
to software-defined
transportation
Consumer and Enterprise technology converge
Near future of wearables
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In the near future, your gym will give you compression gear to wear during your workout to produce energy from your movement. The generators will then power little sensors seamlessly integrated into your clothing, which measure everything your body does: Kinematics, range of motion, heart rate, sweat, reps, blood sugar, body fat and so on.
Near future of wearables
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The gear connects to the cloud, and when you reach a workout station, a virtual coach projected on the wall guides you through your routine. Your stats are automatically shared with your friends, injury information is provided to your doctor, and you keep coming back to the gym, because you can tangibly see your performance improving.
The next big wave of wearable app platforms: AR/VR
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Virtual reality is an immersive experience in which your head movements are tracked in a three-dimensional world, making it ideally suited to apps, games and movies.
Wearables Key facts
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Innovation in wearables is in full swing. Soon … 1. brands will compete on digital identity 2. watches and AR/VR will compete on who has most apps 3. the most successful developers will build on top of data
What we will talk about
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Battle of the Smart Home
Hubs
Developers are the new baseline
Wearable platforms
From Connected Car
to software-defined
transportation
Consumer and Enterprise technology converge
A global market
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A study by McKinsey suggested that a rise in the number of connected cars will increase “the value of the global market for connectivity components and services to €170 billion by 2020”. For many, the car is now turning into an extension of the home, with drivers’ digital, social and mobile habits – underpinned by technology advances – being integrated into the vehicle. Through the use of sensors, which deliver data for analysis, the connected car provides yet another opportunity to understand driver characteristics, their needs, the features they might appreciate, while introducing an additional layer of safety.
Connected Cars Key facts
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1. The innovation focus in Connected Cars is shifting from the dashboard to vehicle data, and in the future to data-driven transportation platforms and services.
2. Actual car makers struggle to keep control over and to gain access to the necessary supply chain, expertise, and data to be leaders in this evolution.
What we will talk about
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Battle of the Smart Home
Hubs
Developers are the new baseline
Wearable platforms
From Connected Car
to software-defined
transportation
Consumer and Enterprise technology converge
Today Smart Home, tomorrow Smart Office
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Smart Home, not building automation, will be the future technology foundation for office environments
Why? Consumer markets offer much faster product evolution and validation
with customers
Wearables in the workplace: same technology, different use cases
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Phase 1
New tech, old solution
Phase 2
Wearable first
Phase 3 Data First
Key facts about consumer and enterprise convergence
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1. Consumer and enterprise technology are increasingly converging in most industries.
2. Consumer not enterprise technology will be the foundation for the converged future.
3. Developers will increasingly work between consumer and enterprise markets.
Question #0
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What kinds of devices /systems is SSB currently being used with? Right now we are working on the integration between SSB and Temboo API. Our first user case is based on gathering data from Fitbit devices trough Temboo. Right now SSB is active on solar plants, it also works on many blood pressure devices like iHealth and Withings and it’s integrated with Google Fit platform.
Question #1
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When do you see iot will have a standard? We don’t think that a global standard will come this year due to heavy fragmentation of devices and communication protocols (usually not open). There are some interesting projects like AllJoyn protocol initially developed by Qualcomm. It has a lot of potential. Here there is an interesting article if you want to know more: http://www.networkworld.com/article/2456421/internet-of-things/a-guide-to-the-confusing-internet-of-things-standards-world.html http://postscapes.com/internet-of-things-alliances-roundup
Question #2
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Can you provide any resources for getting started with programming in any of these hubs like wearables/homes/etc. One of the most interesting software hub for us is Temboo. It connects to many devices and APIs, so it can a good start. It can be used with arduino, texas instruments Iot platform and many others. It’s used for a lot of IoT applications like gas leak monitor, water management, soild quality, etc etc. More information here: https://www.temboo.com/library/ Another interesting architecture is the Samsung’s SmartThings. It’s one of the most used IoT hubs. Info: http://docs.smartthings.com/en/latest/architecture/
Question #3
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Can we do IoT based stuff using arduino and zigbee? Arduino is a great platform to start working on a prototype for the IoT. We have tested a lot of sensors (temperature, humidity, current measure, electric switches and so on). We believe that it’s offering and the support from the community are one of the key factors.
Question #4
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Can you give some good examples of IoT in smart cities? • One of the best examples is the work that is doing
Libelium company. Libelium manufactures hardware and a SDK for wireless sensor networks for Internet of Things (IoT), M2M, and Smart Cities solutions. Some applications are smart parking, smartphone detection, electromagnetic fields levels, traffic congestion, smart lighting , irrigation and so on.
Question #4
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• Another interesting platform is Oracles’s smart city. It is a modular solution made with high industrial standards. The platform provides all ingredients to establish a Sentient City Network, allowing cities to become livable to its residents. Connectivity is the key to a Citywide Nervous System infrastructure, collecting and sharing feedback from all possible sources the basis, measuring and sensing the actual quality of life in a city - the key driver for actual change. Here more info: http://www.oracle.com/us/industries/public-sector/national-local-government/city-platform/index.html
Megatris Comp. LLC We create cloud services and mobile apps to make people life easier.
Our mobile apps are integrated with Megatris Cloud to sell services and goods.
www.megatris.com 1250 Oakmead Pkwy, Sunnyvale, CA 94085, USA
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