Reimagining the Internet
Internet of Things (IoT) is by far the biggest
disruption the tech space has seen in the recent times. It is on the threshold
of snowballing into a major trend that will usher in a true hyper connected age
For
the uninitiated, the Internet of Things (IoT) might look bewildering. But once
you dig in deep, one will realize the possible ramifications IoT will usher in
the days ahead. Simply put IoT is the ability to seamlessly connect different
things—people, machines to cars to anything that has network functionality. If
you go by common sense, IoT is the next logical evolution in leveraging
connectivity far greater good and remote management. It’s all about making
human lives and devices more intelligent and in the bargain one can harvest a
whole lot of goodies out of it.
Let’s
go into specifics and look at defining IoT (we need to say that there are a
whole lot of definition flavors in the Internet, but let’s stick to one from
Texas Instruments). According to Jim Chase, Strategic Marketing at Texas
Instruments who has put in 27 years in the high tech industry. He summarizes
IoT in a white paper that: “IoT is generally thought of as connecting things to
the Internet and using that connection to provide some kind of useful remote
monitoring or control of those things. This definition of IoT is limited, and
references are only a part of the IoT evolution. It is basically a rebranding
of the existing machine-to-machine (M2M) market of today. IoT in its
culmination—where we live in the data is defined as one that creates an
intelligent, invisible network fabric that can be sensed, controlled, and
programmed. IoT-enabled products employ embedded technology that allows them to
communicate, directly or indirectly, with each other or the Internet.”
This,
in fact defines IoT in a true sense. It is about enabling and empowering
devices via the Internet and changing the very functionality of the devices.
It’s something like Software Defined Infrastructure (SDI), one enables the
otherwise limited functionality hardware devices into more agile and
intelligent devices.
THE IoT OPPORTUNITY
Any
conversation on an emerging technology like IoT invokes multiple perceptive
feedbacks. Some may call it hype and some may call it a potential disruptor of
things. But as we look at the IoT progression at this point in time, we need to
say it’s already started to impact the software services industry in a big way.
Many of the leading services providers are going bullish and have an aggressive
IoT play.
In
terms
of the overall opportunity, a latest Gartner forecast puts things in
context. It said that 6.4 bn connected things will be in use worldwide
in 2016,
up 30% from 2015, and will reach 20.8 bn by 2020. In 2016, 5.5 mn new
things
will get connected every day. Gartner estimates that IoT will support
total
services spending of $235 bn in 2016, up 22% from 2015. Services are
dominated
by the professional category (in which businesses contract with external
providers in order to design, install and operate IoT systems), however
connectivity services (through communications service providers) and
consumer services will grow at a faster pace. “IoT services are the real
driver of value
in IoT, and increasing attention is being focused on new services by
end-user
organizations and vendors,” said Jim Tully, Vice President and
distinguished
analyst at Gartner.
Agrees
Somshubhro Pal Choudhury, MD, Analog Devices India, “There is tremendous
potential of value addition with IoT to the estimate of $3.9 tn globally, still
quoting on the lower end of the McKinsey report, but we have barely scratched
the surface. IoT is all about business RoI, application of the right
technologies in monitoring, automating and predicting situations at a
significantly lower total cost of what is being done today.”
Choudhury
believes that the biggest impact of IoT is that the entire business models are
transforming more towards a ‘product as a service’ model, changing from capex
to opex. He cites successful IoT proof points from ones like Michelin Tires and
what it had done for truck fleets. For instance, Michelin monitors the tire
pressure, quality of truck tires and ensures optimum fuel usage by essentially
offering a model of renting out tires and charging based on per km basis. So
instead of selling tires now, Michelin has gone to enabling the transportation
business.
This
works
great for truck fleet management companies, even if paying a bit extra.
This works out great for Michelin as they now have a recurring and
higher
revenue stream and more visibility on their business. All this would not
have
been possible with a bunch of temperature, tire pressure, road condition
sensors in the tires connected by GSM/GPRS to a cloud platform. “A
similar
services model is now being taken up by GE using the GE Predix platform
to monitor and maintain aircraft engines,” adds Choudhary.
HOW SERVICE PROVIDERS ARE APPROACHING IoT?
IoT
is being repetitively referred to in multiple forums both nationally and
internationally as the next big wave after Internet and mobile that will affect
our day-to-day lives. The way we do business contemporarily will have been
impacted hugely on the evolution of IoT in the times to come. In the bargain
the communication of things is changing drastically and is evolving to a common
standard globally on phenomenal scale. Reflecting on this Anuj Bhalla, Vice
President & Global BU Head – Product, System Integration and Maintenance
Service, Wipro says, “A lot of technology companies, product companies,
services companies, and consulting companies are investing their money in
adopting new open and global standards for evolution of IoT which is getting
immensely popular and is one of the key ingredients in driving IoT led
adoption.”
“The
wish list and hype of IoT has been existing for some time now but now we are
seeing new models and solutions that are evolving and are being put into a
proof of concepts. Manufacturing, energy and utility, oil & gas,
transportation, healthcare are some of the key verticals that have evaluated
IoT for some of their business optimization and operational efficiency
enhancement. As a solution provider Wipro is also seeing an increase in customers
wanting to evaluate some of the use cases and address critical pain points.
Clients are inviting us to study and suggest improvisation using IoT for their
business processes,” adds Bhalla.
Despite
the huge opportunity, there are numerous challenges the service providers need
to tide over in the IoT space. Quips Madhusudhan KM, CTO at Mindtree, “IoT is a
relatively complex ecosystem with sensors, specific protocols like BLE
(Bluetooth Low Energy) Zigbee, communication protocols, IoT gateways and
middleware platforms. Our experience has demonstrated that IoT solutions
realize their full potential when they are combined with other technologies,
notably cloud, big data analytics, and integration technologies. It also
requires understanding of entire ecosystem and building strong partnerships
with various players in the ecosystem. This is exactly what Mindtree has been
doing.” Madhusudhan further adds, “At Mindtree, we pride ourselves as being
‘born digital’, since we started during the emergence of eCommerce era in 1999.
Today more than 35% of our revenue is from digital business. With deep experience across
all aspects of digital transformation we are well positioned to design and work
with sensors and devices and all the way to build enterprise scale IoT systems and adding
value in each step of the value chain for industries like retail, airline,
hospitality, car rental companies, banks, insurances, media, and technology.
Experts
believe that there will be a significant uptick in IoT adoption in 2016. As
adoption picks up, one will also see the ironing out of various issues like the
lack of interoperable technologies and standards, data and information management issues, privacy and
security concerns, the skills to manage IoT’s growing complexity, and the lack of
proven RoI and monetization models.
Putting
this thought in perspective, Venkataraman Krishnan, Vice President and Venture
Leader, Engineering and Manufacturing Solutions, Cognizant says, “Service
providers are using incubation models to think big, start small and then scale
up to solve big-impact problems using IoT. But they start out by working with
their partners and customers to prototype and pilot solutions to test the
efficacy of IoT technologies in addressing business objectives and driving value.
It takes a strong partner ecosystem to bring these solutions to market. As a
part of this engagement model, prospects and customers are increasingly
experimenting and discovering together. Service providers are working closely
with businesses to bring several points of view together with the primary goal of unearthing value for their end customers.”
Meanwhile
other top players like Infosys firmly believe that IoT is going to be the next
face of industrialization. Quips Sudip Singh, SVP, Head Global Services,
Engineering Services, Infosys, “At Infosys IoT is an integration of
engineering, IT and data analytics. Any successful IoT implementation from the
enterprise or industries involves end-to-end integration from sensors to big
data. In this regard IoT is a multi-technology, multi-vendor, and multiskill
requirement. IoT is one of the important themes and Infosys has been bolstering
its leadership position in the engineering space.”
MOVING FORWARD
It
is
clear at the end of the day that IoT is going to disrupt individual
lives to
enterprise IT organizations in a big way in the days ahead. But like all
progressive technologies, there are apprehensions that need to be dealt
with.
We need more clarity on standardizations so that seamless connectivity
and
inter connectivity can happen. Quips Sudip Singh, “There are a few
apprehensions associated with IoT such as security, privacy, reliability
etc.,
and service providers are creating their own frameworks, building
consultative
approaches, conceptualizing business solutions to address these.
Building right
skills and investing into right technologies are another important
initiatives
that service providers are undertaking in order to build successful IoT
use
cases. Sometimes these skillsets reside outside the organizations and
hence
service providers are also investing in building the IoT ecosystem with
external entities such as start-up companies as well as academia.
Service
providers are also willing to co-invest along with their clients and put
their
skin in the game.”
Clearly,
IT services companies have a major role to play in driving the adoption and
implementation of IoT solutions. Venkataraman Krishnan of Cognizant sums it up
aptly, “Service providers must demystify IoT for customers, and provide the
scale and integration capabilities required to hold together disparate systems
and the entire ecosystem.”
Dataquest asked Somshubhro Pal Choudhury, MD, Analog Devices
India on the IoT impact on various verticals, his take on it:
Smart Watches and Wearable: This
vertical has taken off with wide range of fitness gadgets and smart watches.
The volume is in consumer-centric gadgets today. The market for remote
healthcare and disease management and tracking with clinical grade devices is
slower to emerge.
Smart Homes and Appliance: There are varied use cases.
The driver for smart appliances is primary returns, warranty, and scheduled
maintenance more than anything else. The dream of smart homes has been on the
radar for more than 2 decades now, but it will still be only for high-end
homeowners who can afford it.
Smart Meters/Smart Grid: Already close to 50% of the
homes in the US have smart meters and Europe is deploying in a huge way. Asia
is slow in adoption. In India it has happened only in the state of Maharashtra
for a large scale deployment of the tune of 3mn meters.
n Smart Buildings: Focus is more on energy management and security. We are
seeing active deployment of energy management scenarios with automated HVAC and
lighting control based on occupancy worldwide.
Transportation: Mostly focused on fleet management
of cars, trucks, and buses via telematics. Several consumer-centric gadgets and
IoT solutions are available all around the world today in terms of plugging
into the OBD2 port of the car and analytics to understand and schedule
maintenance.
Smart City: Primary driver would be Smart
lighting to reduce energy usage first and foremost followed by
security/surveillance. There is a big push worldwide to move to LED street
lights and connected smart lights will give additional benefits along with this
LED switchover. Ashwin Mahesh @IoTNEXT2015 talked about a bottom-up approach of
building up an infrastructure that can be given at ward level. I frankly see
that as a big benefit for scalability of smart cities versus a custom systems
integration approach that is ongoing today.
Industrial Automation: It would be a slow start in
terms of IoT getting into the current industrial automation systems, but
monitoring of the equipment to predict failure, asset tracking, etc, are already
starting to happen in a large way.
Source | http://www.dqindia.com/
Regards
Pralhad
Jadhav
Senior
Librarian
Khaitan
& Co
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