…As
Huawei, ZTE, SAP Launch IoT Products
German
tech show, CeBIT has been hijacked by the nascent IoT industry as Huawei, ZTE,
and SAP all used the event to make announcements, according to latest reports
by iotworldnews.com.
Huawei
launched a connected city lighting solution that claims to reduce municipal
lighting energy bills by 80% though ‘multi-level intelligent control’.
Essentially this seems to mean every street light is connected to a central
console via 6LoWPAN technology, from where it can easily be switch on and off,
or even dimmed, according to sensors that record how much activity is happening
near the light and what the weather’s like.
“Lighting
IoT lays a solid foundation for the integration of a variety of sensors, to
facilitate functions such as environmental and transportation monitoring, and
installation of smart charging facilities and intelligent rubbish bins,
providing Smart City development with valuable big data and integrated
interaction to improve citizens’ lives,” said Wu Chou, CTO of Huawei’s Switch
and Enterprise Communications division.
Not
to be out done rival vendor ZTE announced three IoT initiatives at the show.
The BluePillar Smart Streetlamp incorporates a 4G base station transceiver, IoT
sensor bundle and a charging point for electric vehicles. Three new smart
meters were also launched that support a range of low power wireless standards
including Zigbee and LoRa, the latter of which is considered to be especially
good for the ‘last mile’ data transmission. Lastly an mHealth physical
examination terminal
is designed to monitor the body via wearable IoT devices
and help manage chronic conditions.
“The
BluePillar lighting solution brings a new operation-model,” said Yanmin Bo,
Vice CEO of ZTE. “It forms many links in the industrial chain including
government, committee sites, councils, operators, equipment firms and service
providers, resulting in smarter collaboration and increased productivity. It
provides an opportunity for operators to expand into new markets.”
German
enterprise software giant SAP looked to strengthen its IoT credentials via a
partnership with Vodafone to produce the ‘IoT foundation bundle for SAP HANA.
The collaboration aims to allow enterprises to connect and manage devices using
Vodafone’s IoT connectivity platform and to collect and move data from the
devices into the SAP HANA platform.
“SAP
is building a strong ecosystem of key partners in the IoT space,” said Nayaki
Nayyar, head of IoT GTM, SAP. “Working with companies like Vodafone, we are
able to provide a seamless and feature-rich way for our customers to get the
most out of their IoT data — from insight to outcome.”
Elsewhere
SK Telecoms made its big IoT strategy announcement, which involves investing
KRW 100 billion over the next two years to roll-out a low-power WAN across
South Korea using the 900MHz band. Alongside this SKT is establishing an ‘IoT
Control Center’ to manage the network and devices, and upgrade its ThingPlug
IoT platform.
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