Would CAT-iq be a techology for wireless Sensor Networks

by webredactie 12. May 2010 18:36

It seems that Ultra Low Power DECT / CAT-iq offers a solution for wireless sensor networks, but would it fit?

We have read an interesting article, titled 'Wireless Sensor Networks – We Are Getting There' By Dr Peter Harrop, Chairman, IDTechEx

One hundred years after Faraday, came that other European giant of electrical theory and experiment, Nikola Tesla, who also parted his hair down the middle. Faraday brought us the dc motor and much more besides: Tesla brought us the ac motor and much more besides. However, Tesla did most of his work in the USA and became an American citizen.  In 1905 he foretold that we shall be communicating with hand held phones all over the world. Another hundred years onward and the progress towards that dream has been truly awesome.

Yet it is only a first step to small devices communicating without human involvement and without those radio masts and their expensive and vulnerable cabling. Remember that cellphones like land lines went down during the Haiti earthquake. It is not just East Asian hackers take down our systems: they remain extremely vulnerable and that includes the internet with its hard-wired infrastructure. Just power outages from a volcano or an earthquake can take them down.

Mimicking the way a message is passed through a crowd of people, so-called ad hoc networking of radio signals is on its way. In its most general form it is like a mesh, where anything can communicate with anything provide it is near enough and ready enough. Like people hearing and talking, mesh networking devices can both receive and transmit without infrastructure. For example, after three decades of development, we now see tens of millions of utility meters in large buildings communicating via these mesh networks using the inherently meshed ZigBee protocol and derivatives. Start up Meraki Networks connects 400,000 San Francisco residents to the internet via their Free the Net ad hoc networking project and others aim to replace the tangle of wires in the home with mesh networking.

Wireless Sensor Networks WSN are machine to machine M2M mesh networks operating like the internet in that they are self organising and self healing. If one “node” is out of action, then the message eventually gets round by another means. Drop them from a helicopter: they do the rest because they are “self-calibrating”. Little wonder that battlefield communications is a primary proving ground of WSN and they will be used to study thermal vents at intense pressure on the seabed because they tolerate node failure. 

We should like these new networks to handle huge amounts of data and be completely maintenance free so we can put them on a billion trees to monitor forest fires, seal them in the concrete of buildings or the metal of engines and even drop them on disaster areas such as oil spills to monitor every animal and slick and help to deal with them. The SNCF national rail system in France already finds that they survive well in rolling stock.

However, as with people passing on a message in a crowded room, there are severe problems of maintaining such nodes if they are to be there for long.Batteries must survive and remain charged or something better must be used.  There are severe problems of interference and garbled messages in both cases as well so the mathematicians, standards writers and systems analysts are working on that. Wireless bandwidth is a constrained resource, knowing node location is troublesome, coping with moving nodes is difficult and there are other challenges.

With WSN we therefore compromise – hugely. In a world of real time communication, WSN often gives very delayed messaging. The message only passes when another node comes within range and power is available, perhaps because the sun has hit the solar cell on the node and charged the supercapacitor or the heat of the engine has provided thermoelectric energy.

There is therefore a trend towards putting two or even three different kinds of harvester in each node. Alternatively, a lithium thionyl chloride primary battery can last 20 years in the node but its use may have to be minimal– not too many messages passing and not for too long. Tadiran batteries leads here.

So far, the packets of data are extremely small with all WSN, but Twitter has shown us that small packets of data can achieve a great deal. So have EnOcean “No Wires, No Batteries, No Hassle” radio-emitting light switches and other controls in over 100,000 buildings. Some are two way but not yet meshed. EnOcean relies on energy harvesting by electrodynamics with a miniature version of your bicycle dynamo capturing movement – thank you Faraday. They also use photovoltaics and thermoelectrics. Add piezoelectrics used by others and all are leading us to the batteryless WSN, though we are not there yet: not in volume use anyway.

In that crowded room, sending a message is easier if people have strong voices and good hearing. The electrical equivalent is chips that use less power in the WSN node. Huge advances have been made here. In the picture we show the power needs of various electrical and electronic devices and how WSN have been “gas guzzlers”. Some discharge their batteries in only a few weeks.  If they have to rely on energy harvesting into rechargeable batteries we have to recognise that no rechargeable battery is guaranteed for even ten years and their life is often far less.

The good news is that companies such as Dust Networks now have WSN routing nodes taking a mere 90 to 300 microwatts and leaf nodes at the edge of the network functioning on a mere 30 microwatts. Such figures match those of traditional active RFID which is much more primitive in its capability. Suddenly tiny broad band vibration harvesters, transparent film photovoltaics and many other forms of harvesting become sufficient and the 20 year node looks possible.

A forthcoming event uniquely pulls all this progress together and airs the exciting applications that result. It is “Energy Harvesting and Storage Europe/ Wireless Sensor Networks & RTLS Europe” in Munich Germany with a two day conference 26-27 May, optional masterclasses before and after and visits to local centres of excellence and an exhibition. Presentations from GE, NYK, EADS, Continental,  Northrop Grumman, the US military SPAWAR research center, the aeroengine research of Rolls Royce , ST Ericsson, Texas Instruments, Philips, Dust Networks, Schneider Electric, the ZigBee Alliance, EnOcean. Tadiran Batteries and many other world class developers and users show the way.

In due course, the new printed electronics, a revolution as significant as the microchip forty years ago, gives the prospect of memristor electronics mimicking the synapses of the human brain. This could mean even lower power consumption. We may have harvesting, electronics and sensors all printed on top of each other on plastic film or paper at very low cost and, where necessary, biodegradable and/ or transparent devices. For example, the nodes monitoring that oil slick and its trapped animals will decay into harmless material when their task is done.

It is certain that there will be other major breakthroughs that we cannot currently envisage, including perhaps by a third genius after the third century following the other two. Maybe that man or woman will also part their hair down the middle like Faraday and Tesla. Stranger things have happened.   

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B2B | cat-iq market | General | Hardware developers stuff | Software developers stuff

Global Consumer Network Storage Industry Moving Beyond “Innovation” Stage into “Early Adopter” Stage

by webredactie 26. April 2010 14:42

The consumer network storage (CNS) market appears to be migrating beyond its “innovator” roots, which could be a key factor contributing to its continued growth. According to In-Stat, major vendors are now focusing on customer education, awareness and ease-of-use to influence consumer demand and increase wider adoption.

Recent research by In-Stat found the following:

The market will continue to mature as customer education and ease of use drive adoption, and market share is concentrated among the leading vendors.
Price will become more of an issue; even the high-end CNS products will not exceed $800 per unit. Web-enabled consumer devices, such as TVs and Blu-ray players, are diversifying the demand and applications for CNS devices. The consumer network storage market will grow at a CAGR of nearly 40% between 2009 and 2014.
The research, “Global Consumer Network Storage Market”, covers the worldwide market for consumer network storage. It includes:

  • Market forecasts by capacity, price tier, and geographic area through 2014.
  • Examination of market challenges and opportunities, as well as the home network ecosystem. 
  • Analysis of a consumer survey on home networks, connected devices and usage. 
  • Major vendor market share, product and feature matrix.

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B2C | Hardware developers stuff | services

Broadcast Network Operators across Europe join to create European Association

by webredactie 20. April 2010 09:19

Broadcast Network Operators from 20 European countries have come together to create an association representing their industry’s interest vis-à-vis EU policy makers and stakeholders.

Recognizing consumer demand for Digital Terrestrial Television and convinced of the need for a coordinated approach to support future developments, Broadcast Network Operators across Europe have joined to create Broadcast Networks Europe. The association aims to ensure that European citizens continue to have universal access to a broad range of TV and radio programs and content as well as other over-the-air services.

Broadcast Networks Europe currently gathers twelve founding members: Abertis (Spain), Arqiva (United Kingdom), Broadcast Services Denmark (Denmark), Elettronica Industriale (Italy), Norkring (Norway), OIV (Croatia), ORS (Austria), Radiocom (Romania), Rai Way (Italy), Swisscom Broadcast (Switzerland), TDF Group (France) and Teracom (Sweden). Media Broadcast (Germany), Digita (Finland), Levira (Estonia), Antenna Hungaria (Hungary), Norkring België (Belgium), Norkring d.o.o (Slovenia) amongst others are also represented via their parent companies (forming part of the founding members).

Dedicated to maintaining an efficient and fair regulatory and operational environment for Terrestrial Broadcast Network Operators, the association will provide a framework for member companies to exchange views on policy matters and develop joint positions. “Working together to maintain competitiveness of the terrestrial platforms is essential,” says Lars Backlund (Teracom) Vice Chairman of the association. “We expect that operators from several other countries will join the association in the course of the next few months giving our sector an even more important and representative voice,” he adds.

Broadcast Networks Europe has set up three working groups focusing on policy setting, commercial aspects, and technical and spectrum availability matters. These will be respectively chaired by Josep Ventosa (Abertis), Dr Peter D. Couch (Arqiva) and Marco Marcovina (Elettronica Industriale).

Broadcast Networks Europe is an international non-profit making association registered in Brussels. Its operations are managed by Interel Association Management located nearby the European Institutions. Broadcast Networks Europe has participated in discussions at the recent Spectrum Summit and will hold its launch event on 2nd June in Brussels.

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B2B | B2C | General

Consumer Network Storage Market Benefits from Growth in Networked Homes and Web-Enabled Consumer Devices

by webredactie 8. March 2010 09:50

With home networking adoption passing 50% of households in North America and 13% worldwide, the consumer network storage market is seeing continued growth. Web-enabled consumer devices, such as TVs and Blu-ray players, are further diversifying the demand and applications for consumer network storage devices, reports In-Stat.

Recent research by In-Stat found the following:

  • The consumer network storage market will grow at a compound annual growth rate of nearly 40% between 2009 and 2014.
  • 27% of North American consumers that own a network-capable video game console use the devices to watch video that is stored elsewhere on the home network. 
  • North America was the largest CNS market in 2009. Starting in 2011, Europe will become the leading CNS market. 
  • Consumer network storage capacities up to 1.5 terabytes will peak in 2011, giving way to even higher capacities.

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B2C | General

Orange accelerates the roll-out of mobile HD voice in Europe

by webredactie 15. February 2010 12:01

Orange is today ramping up its planned roll-out of mobile HD voice services in Europe with the addition of France, Spain and Luxembourg to its 2010 roadmap. Mobile HD voice is the second critical strand in Orange’s HD voice strategy, building on from the highly successful delivery of HD voice services for VOIP in 2006. Following technological developments, Orange has confirmed that its UK customer trial of mobile HD voice will start from Spring and run for three months.

In September 2009, Orange became the world’s first operator to commercially launch a mobile HD voice service in Moldova, announcing plans to bring mobile HD voice to the UK and Belgium in 2010. In addition to mobile HD voice, Orange was also the first operator to launch HD over VOIP, first in France and shortly to be rolled out to Poland and Spain. 

Customers using mobile HD voice services will benefit from the best possible sound quality, including a much richer and natural sound that is capable of conveying emotion significantly better than an ordinary handset. It helps people hear better in noisy environments, providing clearer voice conversations and creating a much closer feeling of proximity between both parties, almost as if callers are actually in the same room. 

HD Voice uses the AMR-WB (Adaptive Multi-Rate Wideband) speech codec.  This provides excellent audio quality due to a wider speech bandwidth of 50–7000 Hz compared to the current narrowband speech codec of 300–3400 Hz.  The AMR-WB delivers significantly enhanced sound quality whilst utilising the same network resources.

Voice services are expected to continue to be the largest revenue generator worldwide, accounting for 69% revenues on a global basis and for no less than 60% in any region in 2014 (Ovum).

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B2C | cat-iq market | Competition | services

The HD Voice Opportunity for Network Operators

by webredactie 4. February 2010 12:36

The Radicati Group - an independent market research firm - has published a whitepaper looking at the role of high fidelity HD Voice services have in business class fixed-mobile-convergent (FMC) services for the Small-to-medium business (SMB).

As the battle for the elusive SMB customer moves into FMC, this whitepaper looks at how HD Voice can differentiate and add value to the network operators' offerings for business subscribers.

Whilst voice services are the backbone of most network operators, the audio fidelity of voice telephony has not improved in over 80 years. With the relentless drive towards high definition services, network operators must address voice quality or risk loosing traffic to higher quality providers.
 
HD Voice has the potential to change voice telephony for ever. With HD Voice conversations are clearer, more precise and more effective. Studies show HD Voice calls last longer than regular fidelity calls, with participants reporting the conversations as being "more natural" and "more comfortable", with less time spent "deciphering" what is being said. 
 
This paper looks at how HD Voice can both, reinvigorate voice telephony, and how it can transform the role of VoIP from a "toll-evasion" option to a real value-added service. Ultimately, this paper looks to answer how network operators can capitalise on the $103 billion dollar opportunity of high fidelity, value-added VoIP services.

read the whitepaper.

communigate hd voice.pdf (424,97 kb)

Wireless-networked TV shipments to surge

by webredactie 26. July 2009 17:37

Annual shipments of televisions with wireless Web connectivity will jump at least fivefold over the next two years as technological advances shrink the cost of adding the feature, according to a report released today.

Television manufacturers will ship about 20 million wireless-networked TVs globally in 2011, ABI Research said today. That year, wireless-networked TVs will account for about 11% of total flat-screen shipments, up from about 2% this year, said Michael Inouye, industry analyst with ABI.

The expected jump in Web-connected home-entertainment components reflects both falling TV prices as well as an expanding amount of television and film content available for either downloading or video-streaming from companies such as Netflix, Blockbuster and Amazon.com. Last month, Boston-based research firm Yankee Group estimated that annual sales of Web-connected TVs would surge to about 50 million in 2013 from about 6 million this year, with next year's Super Bowl being a key demand catalyst.

"There are a wide range of expectations for this facet of the market, and most consider the 2009 holiday season into 2010 as the critical period to gauge its potential," said Inouye, adding that manufacturers have spent little to promote wireless-networked TVs.

Although the cost of making a television network-accessible is "relatively low," adding the software necessary for wi-fi connectivity could add as much as $100 in costs per television, according to Inouye.

Consumers will spend about $2.9 billion on video content that's streamed from the Internet to TVs in 2013, up from about $600 million this year, research firm In-Stat said in a report in May. By that year, about 24 million broadband-connected households will regularly watch online videos on their TVs, up from about 2.5 million this year, according to In-Stat.

 

Source; Video Business

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General | Hardware developers stuff | services

Networking over coax and phone wiring will double by 2010, says In-Stat

by phermans 15. July 2009 08:24

As coax cable and telephone line networking become increasingly viable options for home network connectivity, households with an in-home provider network utilizing such technology are expected to more than double in the next year, predicts new research from In-Stat.

 

The research, called Global and North American Service Provider In-Home Networks Over Coax and Phone Wiring, also found that:

  • In 2010, the average PC home network throughput will exceed 150 Mbps in North America, ahead of throughput in Asia/Pacific and European households;
  • Nearly 2/3 of consumer respondents from In-Stat’s survey expressed an interest in watching Internet video on their TV; and
  • Two segregated home networks have been evolving - a service provider-centric network, and a PC-centric network. Each leverages different business models and technologies.

 

 “Consumers want web video on their TV and also increasingly want whole-home DVR capability”, said In-Stat analyst Joyce Putscher, in the press release announcing the research. “Networking over coax makes particularly good sense in North America where 90% of homes have pre-existing coax wiring.”

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Competition | General | Hardware developers stuff | Software developers stuff

Service Provider In-Home Networks Using Coax/Phone Wire Growing

by phermans 27. May 2009 17:33

By 2013, the average household will have 2.5x as many digital media devices (computing, gaming, stationary digital consumer electronics, portable and mobile wireless devices) in use as in 2008, according to In-Stat. Accompanying this adoption will be a rise in the number of these devices that are network-enabled, leveraging various wired mediums and wireless technologies, like coax, phone wiring, powerline, Ethernet, and Wi-Fi. Networking over wiring that already exists in homes is becoming increasingly important. This is particularly the case among service provider entertainment networks that connect set-top boxes together and to residential gateways.

 

“Over the next few years, service providers will drive the growth of in-home networks” says Joyce Putscher, In-Stat analyst. “Entertainment networks tie set-top boxes together, enabling additional services, such as whole-home DVR. Providers will encourage more PC home networks by replacing modem-only households with residential gateways.”

 

The recent research by In-Stat found the following:

  • Two segregated home networks (HN) have been evolving – a service provider-centric network, and a PC-centric network. Each is leveraging different business models and technologies.
  • While consumers want to be able to move content and services between the two types of networks, both technical and business model barriers will continue to stand in their way.
  • Average PC home network throughput will rise by more than 70% from 2008 to 2013.
  • Nearly 2/3 of consumer respondents from In-Stat’s survey expressed an interest in watching Internet video on their TV.
  • Thus far, most service provider deployments using MoCA and HomePNA have been in North America, in terms of volume.

 

Interesting research, but haven't they missed the wireless technology DECT / CAT-iq?

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cat-iq market | Competition | General

In-Stat Sees Growth in Consumer Network Storage Market Shifting to Higher Capacity Models

by phermans 1. April 2009 22:48
2009 – Growth in the consumer network storage market is slowing considerably from 2008 to 2009. However, the market still has solid growth potential over a 5 year forecast period, according to In-Stat.The worldwide consumer network storage market grew by 24% in 2008, a sharp drop from hyper-growth in 2007. From 2008 to 2013, In-Stat expects the worldwide market to see a 32% compound annual growth rate.

"While the overall market is maturing, growth is shifting towards higher capacity models," says Joyce Putscher, In-Stat analyst. "The 1.5TB+ segment is forecasted to see the highest growth, exceeding 100% CAGR."

Recent research by In-Stat found the following:
  • DLNA and remote access are rapidly becoming core features.
  • Among North American consumer survey respondents, nearly one half of network storage owners used the drives to play digital music, and over a quarter use the drives to play digital video.
  • The EMEA (Europe, Middle East and Africa) market is expected to outshine all other regions in growth from 2008 to 2013.

The research, "Global Consumer Network Storage: Say Goodbye 500GB, Hello 2TB" (#IN0904515RC), covers the worldwide market. Consumer network storage includes NAS, SAN, NDAS, and Windows Home Server platforms. It includes:

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