Dublin, March 21, 2017 -- Research and Markets has announced the addition of the "Internet of Things (IoT) 2017-2027" report to their offering.
Researched in late 2016 with ongoing updates, this unique report on the Internet of Things IoT has over 140 data filled pages including over 150 images. It is intended to assist investors, participants and intending participants in the value chain including developers and academics, interested government officials and users seeking the truth based on new investigation. The focus is on identifying genuine capabilities and needs from a commercial point of view.
The pages are mostly in the form of easily assimilated infograms, roadmaps and forecasts. The report is about nodes that sense, learn, gather data and initiate reports and action using IP addressed sensor nodes to process and send information. It is realistic and analytical not evangelical. We do not repeat the mantra about tens of billions of nodes being deployed in only a few years. The many analysts sticking to such euphoria ignore the fact that, contrary to their expectation, very little IoT was deployed in 2016. They are ""bubble pushing"" with their forecasts, predicting ever steeper takeoff, now a physical impossibility.
The money will lie in the systems, software and support examined in this study, though we also look closely at node design to reveal all the impediments to progress as well as the things coming right and the potential for enhanced functionality and payback. For example, the ongoing major breaches of internet security with small connected devices sit awkwardly with system and software manufacturers' claims year after year that they have cracked the problem.
Key Topics Covered:
1. EXECUTIVE SUMMARY AND CONCLUSIONS
1.1. Definitions and scope
1.2. A natural next stage
1.3. IoT infrastructure
1.4. IoT contrasted with IoP
1.5. IoT value chain and bias vs IoP
1.6. Potential applications examples
1.7. Examples of IoT opportunities and suppliers
1.8. Hype and nonsense
1.9. The bigger vision
1.10. But wider deployment means compromises and new challenges
1.11. Some megatrends favour IoT: others do not
1.12. Impediments to IoT
1.13. System and software issues
1.14. Hardware
1.15. Investment in IoT development 2014-2020
1.16. Industry standards ferment and SIGfox, NBIOT etc contention
1.17. Market forecasts 2017-2027
2. INTRODUCTION
2.1. What is IoT?
2.2. Example of possible applications: wearable IoT
2.3. The IoT dream
2.4. Many rename existing things without IP addresses as IoT: this is unhelpful
2.5. Heroic forecasts retained despite a quiet 2016
2.6. Why is IoT gaining attention?
2.7. Automotive IoT in more detail
2.8. Impediments
2.9. Disagreements and uncertainty
2.10. System and node operational improvements
3. CORE MICROCONTROLLER UNIT MCU TECHNOLOGIES
3.1. Manufacture
3.2. Optimising power consumption
3.3. Low power battery backup
3.4. MCU architectures
3.5. MCU components: memory
3.6. MCU components: IO
3.7. MCU co-processors: DSPs
3.8. MCU co-processors: FPGAs
3.9. MCU co-processors: PLDs and CPLDs
3.10. MCU software: Operating Systems
3.11. MCU software: programming languages
3.12. Case study: Texas Instruments MSP430G2333
4. ADJACENT SYSTEM AND SENSOR TECHNOLOGIES
4.1. Sensors
4.2. Communications
5. HARDWARE PLAYERS
5.1. Renesas Electronics
5.2. NXP+Freescale
5.3. Microchip+Atmel
5.4. Atmel
5.5. ST Microelectronics
5.6. Infineon Technologies
5.7. Texas Instruments (TI)
5.8. Cypress/Spansion
5.9. Samsung
5.10. Intel
5.11. Digispark
5.12. Arduino/Genuino
5.13. Apple
5.14. Google
5.15. Amazon
5.16. Raspberry Pi Foundation
5.17. Beagleboard
5.18. Some more MCU prototyping boards...
5.19. And many more SBCs...
6. SYSTEM AND HARDWARE TRENDS
6.1. Benchmarking Clarifies the Future of Internet of Things
6.2. Wide Area network choice - LoRaWAN and LoRa Alliance
6.3. eRIC
6.4. MCU architecture trends: ARM
6.5. Open source hardware and systems
6.6. Moore's Law
6.7. Prices equilibrating
6.8. Other MCU trends
7. APPENDIX: REPORT FROM THE IBM-ENOCEAN ALLIANCE MEETING
For more information about this report visit http://www.researchandmarkets.com/research/chw37z/internet_of
CONTACT: Research and Markets
Laura Wood, Senior Manager
[email protected]
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Related Topics: Internet of Things and M2M


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