IoT

Managing the Chaos of IoT

By Incognito on September, 12 2017

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But the Internet of Things (IoT) is bigger than just consumer devices. According to the GSMA Connected Life forecast, by 2020 there are expected to be more than 25 billion connected devices, while Cisco’s Internet of Everything prediction is for there to be double that, up to 50 billion “intelligent things” by 2020; connecting cars, appliances, smartphones, tablets, monitoring sensors, and more. IoT is moving beyond the connected home, and has the potential to make a significant impact in widespread industrial and commercial applications. Already, cities across North America and Europe rely on IoT for fleet management of car-share schemes, while applications in farming, aerospace, energy, and mining industries all represent opportunities for IoT and M2M applications where real-time data can help stakeholders make smarter decisions based on real analytics and trends.

For service providers, the potential for IoT growth is significant. Two questions immediately come to mind: “Which new services can I offer in the brave new world of IoT?” and “How do I support all of this?”

These questions are not necessarily easy to answer. Numerous studies have detailed the headaches experienced by both consumers and small- and medium-sized businesses (SMBs) when it comes to supporting technical problems on the subscriber side. Between the costs of truck rolls, lost productivity, and infrastructure-related expenses, it is an expensive exercise to provide support for computers, WiFi, mobile phones, and the overall broadband service experience of subscribers. If you expand those issues to include billions of other connected devices, the costs to service and maintain IoT can seem overwhelming.

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Hence, as IoT deployments scale and new business cases arise, your device management strategy must be able to keep up. Right now, while there are certainly “favorites” emerging in the industry, there is no clear standard for how to interconnect all the “things” in IoT, and which protocols should be used to manage them.

A variety of groups have taken some positive steps to improve this situation. For example, The Thread Group and Open Connectivity Foundation recently pledged deeper cooperation so that IoT software would interoperate with greater ease. IETF and IRTF are other examples of organizations trying to build open standards that will benefit IoT management.

However, for the foreseeable future, service providers still face a chaos of protocols — not to mention the multiple APIs and access technologies required to monetize the incredible innovation and business opportunities coming out of the field of IoT.

The only choice is to focus on an open device management solution that is able to handle the  brutal complexity that is currently the state of IoT architecture.

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