The Mercury News

Q&A: Stan Schneider of Real-Time Innovation­s

Real-Time Innovation­s CEO foresees a world in which deaths from auto crashes or medical accidents are a thing of the past. To realize that vision, he’s helping companies facilitate the Internet of Things revolution.

- By George Avalos gavalos@bayareanew­sgroup.com

SUNNYVALE — Real-Time Innovation­s aims to do more than jump into the emerging world of the Internet of Things. It has devised software that enables companies and other organizati­ons to connect industrial, transporta­tion, medical and energy devices so they can communicat­e with each other and operate more efficientl­y.

Sunnyvale-based RTI expects to grow its sales to more than $30 million in 2017 from more than $25 million in 2016.

This newspaper recently interviewe­d Stan Schneider, chief executive officer of RealTime Innovation­s, to discuss RTI’s role in the Internet of Things. The interview has been edited for length and clarity. Q How does your company fit into the Internet of Things? A RTI is in the industrial side of the Internet of Things. The industrial side of IoT is a new infrastruc­ture for how the planet runs. We provide software to assist with the improvemen­t of IoT. Q What does your software do to support this infrastruc­ture? A It allows speedier connection­s between systems that are out there. Our software adds intelligen­ce to the system. Q What is RTI doing as a company, or you as an executive, to improve how things work in the Internet of Things? A We are very involved in a new consortium called Open Fog. We have jumped into the guidance leadership of the Internet of Things. We are looking at really making improvemen­ts in robotics, factory systems, avionics and more. We are the largest company selling a connectivi­ty framework, a way to hook things together. It’s a very exciting world. Q What are some of the industry sectors in which you’re most active? A Autonomous cars, planes, trains. Renewable energy systems. We are very active in transporta­tion, the medical space and hospital instrument­s. We are enabling connected medical devices. You go into a hospital, and you see a

‘We Things,’ are just scratching the surface. Because of the Internet of the world will be unrecogniz­able 40 years from now.

respirator, an incubator, EKG machine, and so forth. They are currently not connected with each other in a way that makes them work intelligen­tly. Our software can be used by transporta­tion systems to find all the cars within 200 yards of an intersecti­on as a way of enabling autonomous driving. Q Are IoT technologi­es getting to a critical mass now? A All the analysts agree on only one thing about the future of the Internet of Things: The number, the value of this market, will eventually be in the trillions of dollars. We are not anywhere near that today. Some serious investment­s are going on. New projects are taking off. And most of them are being driven by some compelling needs. Q How do things look in the medical sector? A We are really working on getting medical devices and systems to talk to each other. After heart disease and cancer, medical errors are the third-leading cause of death. We are trying to help medical profession­als not make as many mistakes. It’s the same principle as computer systems being able to make vehicles safer. Q What sort of opportunit­ies do you see in the energy field? A One of our big goals is to make green energy really more practical. Look at a solar panel. Solar panels on a house do produce electricit­y that can be put on the grid. But the utility Stan Schneider, CEO of Real-Time Innovation­s, poses in the research laboratory. RTI software is designed to make generating electricit­y through solar power more predictabl­e, with systems being tested by Duke Energy, among others. really can’t use that electricit­y easily. Our software makes these electricit­y devices more intelligen­t. We believe we can make the electricit­y generated by residents through solar more predictabl­e. It can’t just randomly be thrown on the grid. Q Which power companies are using your software for energy applicatio­ns? A It is being tested by Duke Energy, Oak Ridge National Laboratori­es in Tennessee, and others. Q What will be needed for your technology to really take off in the energy field? A Commercial deployment requires complete redesign of the nation’s power grid. This will create a lot of jobs and a huge economic boom. Q What is happening in autonomous vehicles? How would your software enable vehicles to operate better? A Vehicles in the future will free people from driving. It will purge deaths from highway accidents. About 35,000 people a year died in auto accidents in 2016. That number will go down dramatical­ly. We can get rid of the entire auto insurance industry. Roadside motels will go away. These technologi­es will make real estate that is far away from cities more valuable. We can get rid of most of the parking structures and parking lots. Q What would be some practical example of how this would work, using your software? A It would be like an Uber or Lyft service. The car picks you up, drops you off, then goes and picks up someone else, or goes back home.

Then when you or someone else needs it, the car comes back for you or the other person. Q How is the growth of the Internet of Things affecting your company? A We are hiring aggressive­ly. Not just in Sunnyvale, but all over the world, we are hiring especially sales people and service engineers. Q What are your sales numbers? A More than $25 million last year, and we are anticipati­ng more than $30 million in sales this year. Q How many employees do you have now? A Considerab­ly over 100 now.

Company: Real-Time Innovation­s Job: Chief executive officer Age: 59

Birthplace: Ann Arbor, Mich., but raised in Grand Rapids, Mich. Residence: Sunnyvale Education: University of Michigan, B.S. Applied Math and Physics; M.S. Computer Engineerin­g. Stanford, Ph.D. Electrical Engineerin­g and Computer Sciences

Family: Married for more than 30 years. Four children Q What kind of venture funding have you obtained? A We are a Silicon Valley anomaly. We don’t have external capital, and we are not seeking external capital. We got a good capital infusion from the previous sale of a company. Q How can you make sure that your software doesn’t allow cars to get hacked? A RTI is very much a security company in addition to everything we do. Our systems will be very hard to hack. We have a security test bed being built outside of Chicago that is designed to specifical­ly answer that question. The attention to security is orders upon orders of magnitude greater today than it was in recent years. Q Will IoT really be a game changer? A We are just scratching the surface. Because of the Internet of Things, the world will be unrecogniz­able 40 years from now.

 ?? GARY REYES/STAFF ?? Real-Time Innovation­s Chief Executive Officer Stan Schneider says the Sunnyvale company has big plans in robotics, factory systems and avionics. “We are the largest company selling a connectivi­ty framework, a way to hook things together,” Schneider...
GARY REYES/STAFF Real-Time Innovation­s Chief Executive Officer Stan Schneider says the Sunnyvale company has big plans in robotics, factory systems and avionics. “We are the largest company selling a connectivi­ty framework, a way to hook things together,” Schneider...
 ?? GARY REYES/STAFF ??
GARY REYES/STAFF

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