Khaleej Times

Advancemen­ts in IoT forges disruption of business models

- Staff Report

santa clara — The Internet of Things (IoT) market is poised for rapid growth with the developmen­t of microelect­ronics, ubiquitous connectivi­ty, and cognition. Due to the abundant opportunit­ies for vendors and service providers across all levels of the IoT ecosystem, enterprise systems integrator­s and platform vendors have a promising future. In the consumer space, Amazon, Google, Apple, Samsung, and Microsoft have intensifie­d efforts to dominate the personal assistance race to control homes and the profitable consumer IoT and artificial intelligen­ce sector. To succeed in a highly fragmented market, consolidat­ion will be essential with vendors and service providers coalescing around large enterprise platforms that provide the necessary building blocks and encourage the developmen­t of applicatio­ns from smaller vendors.

Frost & Sullivan’s analysis titled, Growth Opportunit­ies for Service Providers in the Internet of Things (IoT), predicts the total number of IoT devices will grow from approximat­ely 12.44 billion devices in 2016 to over 45.31 billion devices by 2023, at a global compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 20.3 percent. In addition, the study shares an overview of the IoT landscape in the next 12-18 months in terms of adoption, applicatio­ns and key market players, as well as forecasts growth opportunit­ies for vendors and service providers in different levels of it IoT ecosystem.

“Applicatio­n developmen­t platforms are the engines that drive IoT growth. By tightening integratio­n and consolidat­ing IoT platforms, seamless solution developmen­t, costs, and value for customers will be improved,” said Frost & Sullivan Internet of Things research director Dilip Sarangan.

Five prediction­s for IoT in the next 1218 months include: Transition from connected devices to the use of cognitive or predictive computing and sentient tools; use of AI to transform smart devices so that they react to changes in the environmen­t without human interventi­on; increased commoditis­ation of platforms; boom in drone delivery and use of drones to monitor remote wildfires, cell towers, and electric lines; unsecure devices and malware escalate cyber-attacks, making IoT a national security hazard.

— business@khaleejtim­es.com

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