Verizon simplifies Internet of Things
to accelerate adoption
SAN FRANCISCO
– Verizon today announced its global strategy to simplify the Internet
of Things (IoT) and accelerate market adoption. Verizon’s plan includes
- Launching ThingSpace: a
new IoT platform allowing developers to create applications, customers
to manage devices, partners to market their services, and Verizon to
launch integrated vertical solutions simply, in an open environment.
- Creating a new dedicated network core and new connectivity options for the next-generation of IoT use cases
- Driving innovation to tackle big challenges in agriculture, healthcare, the consumer electronics evolution and the sharing economy
- Commercializing Verizon’s big data analytics engine for IoT deployments
- Introducing three new end-to-end smart cities solutions, Intelligent Video, Intelligent Lighting and Intelligent Traffic Management.
With an ecosystem of more than 1,000 channel partners and
revenue from its IoT and telematics solutions totaling $495 million
year-to-date, Verizon is generating one of the largest amounts of
revenue from the Internet of Things of any company in the U.S.
“Continued innovation in smart cities, connected cars and wearables
demonstrates that IoT is the future for how we will live and work,” said
Mike Lanman, senior vice president Enterprise Products at Verizon.
“Despite the exciting potential, IoT is still too complex, too
fragmented, too expensive to connect and too hard to scale. Success in
that future relies on a leader that can cut through the complexity and
change the IoT model. That’s where Verizon comes in. With our experience
in networks, devices, platforms and applications, we are taking a
holistic approach to simplifying adoption to expand the IoT market from
millions to billions of connections.”
Verizon outlined its IoT strategy at an event held today at its San Francisco Innovation Center.
The company also showcased how it’s putting its IoT capabilities to
work for customers in the marketplace today through ongoing
collaboration. Projects underway include.
- Collaborating with Intel, the largest chipset maker in the
world, to pilot Verizon’s agricultural platform at Hahn Family Wines, a
family-owned winery based in the Santa Lucia Highlands, located in
California’s Monterey County. With more than 1,000 acres of vineyards,
the pilot uses sensor data and analytics that can be used effectively to
conserve and add precision to resources like water and energy, prevent
disease and lower operating costs – resulting in increased and
consistently predictable crop yields.
- Teaming up with Renesas, one of the largest suppliers of
microcontrollers in the world, to enable manufacturers of connected
machines in IoT and industrial segments to embed Verizon IoT’s
technology early in the design process and scale quickly.
- Helping to monitor pharmaceutical products in the supply chain and
improve safety utilizing Verizon Intelligent Track and Trace. Verizon’s
strategic relationship with rfXcel uses IoT technology and leverages
the Verizon network, to provide near real-time monitoring of product
environments. The commercial launch of Verizon’s Intelligent Track and
Trace Solution is expected spring 2016.
- Helping colleges and universities across the U.S. reduce their
carbon footprint by up to 20 percent by powering the Innova EV Car Share
fleet of all-electric vehicles with Verizon Share, an app designed for
today’s sharing economy. As millennials place more emphasis on sharing
than on owning vehicles, Verizon’s partnership with Innova EV Car Share
is aimed to expand its reach beyond the existing pilot program to other
campuses. Pilot sites include the University of Pittsburgh, Colorado
State University, the University of Wisconsin–Madison and Washington
State University.
“We are thrilled to be working with Hahn Family Wines, Innova,
Intel, Renesas and rfXcel among many others, to help them scale and
create new business models. These projects show the tremendous range of
issues that we can attack in new ways with IoT solutions. We look
forward to engaging other customers, partners and developers through our
new ThingSpace platform and helping them bring transformational ideas
to market,” Lanman added.
Calling all developers
One barrier to innovation is that developers of new IoT solutions
have to go through multiple channels and cumbersome processes to access
the tools they need to create and launch applications. Verizon is
radically simplifying that process with ThingSpace, a new self-service web interface.
ThingSpace allows users to manage their IoT environments and related
data, end-to-end, from device to network to application. Developers can
also build IoT solutions using Verizon’s extensive capabilities and
innovation resources. As of today, all developers – even if they are not
a Verizon customer – can code and test on the ThingSpace platform. The
company will hold a developers conference in Boston in December at which
a wide-range of coders including – academia, startups, business and
public sector organizations – will gain access to an expanded set of
APIs and application enablement capabilities on ThingSpace. Verizon will
roll out hundreds more APIs on the platform throughout 2016.
Optimizing the network for the next-generation of IoT use cases
Another barrier to widespread IoT deployment is the cost to connect
to a wide-area network compared to other networks like Wi-Fi, Bluetooth
and ZigBee. Non-cellular-enabled IoT devices typically connect to a
network through a hub or router, which complicates the set-up for
customers and increases the potential for failure. As IoT becomes more
widely adopted, network connectivity needs to be simple, reliable and
economically viable. Recognizing this market gap, Verizon has created a
core IoT network within its LTE architecture optimized for Cat1 devices.
Verizon has also worked with partners to embed LTE chipsets in a
wide-range of connected machines to automate the provisioning process
and make it faster to deploy IoT devices on its wide-area network. These
enhancements are designed to meet or exceed the economic requirements
of the next-generation of IoT use cases. Additional enhancements planned
in 2016 include enabling Power Save Mode for IoT devices to facilitate
several years of battery life.
Commercializing Verizon’s big data engine for IoT deployments
Understanding how to consume and manage data in order to address
customer needs, solve market problems and generate societal benefits is
another barrier to scaling IoT. To help businesses and consumers gain
more actionable insights, Verizon is powering IoT technology with its
sophisticated big data engine. One of the most advanced data and
analytics operations of any industry, Verizon’s platform is designed to
consume massive amounts of data generated by IoT devices and other
machines, analyze it at extremely high speeds and use scalable machine
learning to turn raw data into usable intelligence.
Designed under the direction of the company’s chief data scientist at
Verizon’s labs based in Palo Alto, Calif., this multi-tenant data and
analytics platform is being commercialized for large-scale IoT
deployments.
Paving the way for smarter cities
The market for smart city solutions is projected to grow by more than
20 percent annually from 2015 to 2020, according to industry analysts.
Yet urban areas still suffer from the effects of traffic congestion,
aging infrastructure and inefficient use of resources. Over the past
year, Verizon has addressed the smart city market with IoT solutions for
the connected car and smart grid including GridWide, Verizon Share and hum. Now Verizon is leveraging its network, cloud, security and IoT capabilities to launch Intelligent Video, Intelligent Lighting and Intelligent Traffic Management – three new solutions which will address the issues facing urban and rural communities in a more integrated and scalable way.
Verizon’s intelligent solutions will help municipalities integrate
disparate systems, monitor traffic and safety conditions in real-time
and manage their systems in a dynamic way to improve efficiency and
public safety. Verizon is offering these solutions as-a-service so that
municipal leaders can start small and scale fast.
“Smart cities are complex. They work best when their systems can
coordinate and communicate with each other seamlessly. What is the
correlation between a street light and public safety, or parking and
traffic flow? Our intelligent solutions can be used as important tools
for revitalizing urban life, stimulating economic development and making
communities more dynamic, resilient, sustainable and secure,” Lanman
added.
Source: Verizon press release