Did you know that by 2020 there will be 30 billion connected devices?! Internet of Things (IoT) is a world where 'things', both physical and vitual, are linked, and is set to transform daily life as we know it. This exclusive, invitation-only event brought together global thought leaders and business executives who are passionate about innovation and the advancement of technology.
3. Thank You to our Sponsors and Partners
Partners: Orange, Telefonica, GM, RoboSavvy, Moovit,
Media Partners: Geektime, Levy Shapiro, IATI, IGT, Mobile Monday, Garage Geeks
Special Thanks: Yossi Vardi, Avner Goren, Talia Rafaeli, Karmit Alon, Shai Windman
4. Agenda – Welcome & IoT Infrastructure
Time
Topic
Speaker
14:00-14:10
Welcome
Eran Wagner
Partner, Gemini Israel Ventures
14:10-14:20
Opening
Yossi Vardi
Chief
14:20-14:40
Networks for the IoT
Volker Ziegler
Chief Architect, NSN
14:40-15:00
IoT Connectivity
Avi Baum
CTO, TI
15:00-15:20
Small Data
Keith Saft
VP M2M Innovation, Telefonica
15:20-15:40
Panel: Starting an IoT Venture
Itay Frishman
Lawyer, GKH Law
15:40-16:10
Break
5. Agenda – Application of the IoT
Time
Topic
Speaker
16:10-16:40
Wearables
Patrice Slupowski
VP Innovation, Orange
16:40-17:00
Internet of Vehicles
Barak Hershkovitz
Head of OnStar Europe, GM
17:00-17:20
Moovit – Sensing Public Transport
Nir Erez
CEO, Moovit
17:20-17:40
Robotics, 3D Printing and the IoT
Limor Schweitzer
CEO, RoboSavvy
17:40-18:00
Internet of Wine
Gil Eiges
VP Innovation, Amdocs
18:00-18:30
Startup Roundtable
Amir Lahat
18:30-19:00
Drinks
12. Why Israel?
Interdisciplinary, innovative engineering approach (HW/SW)
• Deep semiconductor knowhow
• Excellence in communication technology
• Great software development capabilities
Experience in relevant fields such as
• Motors and motor control, movement planning
• Big data analytics, AI, “machine learning”
• Sensors and machine Vision
Great product design knowledge
Developing consumer orientation
Vibrant eco-system including entrepreneurs, startups, multinationals,
academia, investors, design houses, government
11
26. How Many Internets Are There?
Knowledge (static)
Services (dynamic)
Internet of People (Users)
Internet of Machines (M2M)
IoT - One Internet For All
27. Node Range
Connectivity Technologies At-A-Glance
LTE
900 MHz Proprietary RF
Supply Capacity [mAh]:
No Supply
Low Cap. 200mAh
(Coin cell)
300 M
Med Cap. 2000mAh
Z-Wave
802.11ah
Hi Cap. / AC Power
802.11ac
802.11b
802.11g, n
802.15.4 @ 900 MHz
Cost [USD]:
100 M
<1
802.11a
802.15.4 @ 2.4 GHz
1–2
Bluetooth
10 M
2 – 10
BLE
EnOcean
> 10
1M
RFID
100 Kbps
1 Mbps
10 Mbps
100 Mbps
1 Gbps
IoT should allow connectivity agnostic fabric
Throughput
28. Venues
Wearables for wellness, health care
Personal
On-the-Go
Cars, roadsides for smart cities
Industrial
Sensors for production line management and efficiency
Infrastructure
Metering for building management systems and smart grid
IoT solutions should allow venue agnostic fabric
29. Challenges
Energy
Should not impose change of power supply
No change of energy class
Communication Introduces Inherent Overheads
In many typical applications the amount of information to transmit is
significantly lower than the total bits over the air
Need to ensure positive energetic balance
Devices cannot consume more than they are supposed to save
Source: Zonoff consumer survey (Nov, ‘13)
30. Challenges
Security
More endpoints create more penetration options
New usage models create new threats
capabilities that were not considered remotely accessible,
may now become accessible
State of the art Security is bare necessity
31. Challenges
Data
Client Window Size
More endpoints mean higher density
resulting in demand for capacity
New usage schemes entail new routing paths
Large amounts of data create storage need
Real network latency introduces a challenge to
limited resource systems
32. Challenges
Simplicity & Cost
Simplicity and Cost constitute ~85% of the
reasons consumers avoid connected devices
Connectivity should not be treated as a
capability but rather a main virtue of the product
Requires seamless operation at minimal cost adder
Today, the expectation is more significantly less then $10
Source: Zonoff consumer survey (Nov, ‘13)
33. Turning Challenges into Opportunities
Energy
Lots of nodes enable lower energy per node
Distributed system topology translates into
distributed power dissipation
Large number
of nodes
Higher
node density
Lower node-to-node
average distance
Lower per-node
power consumption
34. Turning Challenges into Opportunities
Security
Many devices allow redundancy for missioncritical system to better handle DoS attacks
Distributed topologies enable multi-channel
cross-checks making it harder to penetrate
No single data store
Sensitive data can be distributed
There is no single place to attack in order to gain access to the data
35. Turning Challenges into Opportunities
Data
Wide deployment introduce more routing paths
May give rise to mesh and mesh-resembling topologies
The volatile nature of collected data can be
leveraged to improve storage demand and
reduce capacity needs
Localized consumer-producer traffic result in
offload from loaded network routes
36. TI Enables IoT Today!
Breadth
System Cost
Security
Low-Power
Large portfolio of products in wide range of wireless technologies
High focus on reference design and total solution cost
Product inherent ultimate security
Use case aware design
• Low power & long range
• Low power mesh network
• Proprietary and open protocols
Simplicity
End-to-end integrated solutions w/standard, minimalistic interfaces
• Smart metering and lighting
• Metering, security systems
• Moving into home automation
• Fast – 10Mbps++
• Direct internet connection
• Home & Enterprise apps
• Lowest power
• Connect to tablet/phone
• Moving to industrial, automotive
• Data over power lines (OFDM)
• Developed for smart grid
• Lighting, solar, appliances
• Fast, low latency Ethernet
• Real-time industrial control
• Information technology
IEEE P1901.2
2.4GHz
Enabling IoT. Today.
IEEE 802.15.4
37. Emerging Technology Trends
Silicon technology evolvement
• Zero leakage devices
• Near-zero dissipation active materials
Energy supply advancements
• High-capacity, low-volume batteries
• Nano-batteries & cheaper super capacitors
• Energy harvesting and ‘harvest at the source’ concepts
SW
• SWARM concept for large-scale distributed programming
Data
• Efficient stochastic routing for dense deployments
• New approaches to pattern detection and clustering of locally distributed data
38. The biggest Challenge/Opportunity of all..
A mindset shift
• The source for x10s billion devices in 2020
•
How can I use it?
What is it good for?
Embedded
Thinking
Perpetual motion:
Existing Devices
Connectivity
New services
New use cases
New usage models
Existing devices revamped
New data patterns
Demand for new devices
42. The new value
of connected machines
Expand
Services
With small data you
can make usage,
output, or outcomes
the cornerstone of
your business
model.
Optimize
Processes
Making decisions
with real data is the
best way to optimize,
monetize, and
ensure consistency.
Reduce
Costs
Catch performance
issues before they
become problems
that require costly
fixes or downtime.
46. A small example
Fan running?
Thermostat working?
Cargo?
Door open?
I can fix that...
Turning on the
I’m
getting
too hot!
Now
I’m cool
47. Small data is
knowing hot from cold
Context Engine
BLNK translates raw sensor data into
something meaningful based on the
what’s being measured.
Smart Sensors
capture what’s
happening and
send it on.
-15º
4º
The ice cream is
just right
The drinks are
getting too cold
Dashboards & Actions
show you the big
picture and let you act
“auto-magically”
63. Every five years a word is dominating the CE industry
1990 : Portable
1995 : Digital
2000 : Connected
2005 : Mobile
2010 : Smart
…
2015 : Wearable ?
7
64. From a floor to your eye: an history of computing
Digital
Analog
1960
8
1980
1990
2015?
67. Wearables vs Smartphones
Why not smartphones only ?
–
–
–
–
Why not wearables only ?
–
–
–
–
11
Weight
Accuracy
Power
Battery life
No display
Lack of interface
Cost
Battery life for communication
69. Internet of Things is the next digital revolution
wearable cameras
sport tracking
wellness and e-health
smart Clothing
motion and brain trackers
smart Watches
smart Glasses
300 to 500 million devices
sales per year in 20172018 according to ABI
research compared to 1,7
billion smartphones
Mobile is core and the
communication hub
13
73. Wearables subgroup : sport, wellness and health
Sportives, health &
beauty-conscious, geeks
Misfit Shine
Jawbone
Consumers as patients
GlucoDock
iBGStar
Withings
Nike
Carers
Withings
Fitbit
AMBER
Alert
Withings
Fitbit
Tagg
Remee
17
Equinoxe
74. More activity and sleep trackers…
Larklife
Basis
Live Smarter
Simple. Strong . Wearable
SUPERCHARGE
YOUR DAY.
Loop
WakeMate
The activity tracker that
makes you move.
18
Shine
Wake up fresh, sleep
smarter
iHealth Activity & Sleep
Tracker
75. More health devices…
iHealth Wireless Wrist
Blood Pressure Monitor
iHealth Wireless Blood
Pressure Monitor
Kinsa
Thermometer
An Even Lighter BP Monitor
Wireless Wonder
Know More. Keep Your
Family Healthier.
Medisina
GlucoDock
My personal blood sugar
assistant.
19
Sanofi iBGStar
A meter with style, to match
your lifestyle.
76. More devices…
HAPIfork
Beam Brush
Lumoback
Eat Slowly - Lose Weight - Feel
Great
Brush Smart!
Meet LUMOback, the Smart
Posture & Movement
Feedback System
Release: Q4 2013
Release: 2013
Muse
Breathometer
OMsignal
The Brainwave sensing headband
A Smartphone Breathalyzer
Bio-sensing clothing for
everyday life
Release: ?
Release: Q4 2013
20
Release: Q1 2014
Scanadu &
Scanaflo
Finally, you can know
yourself best.
Release: Q1 2014
Smart Sock Fitness
Tracker
Wellness. Reinvented.
Release: Q1 2014
86. Analysts are betting on those devices success
Are there more devices than customers ?
30
300 to 500 million devices sales per year in 2017-2018 according to
ABI research compared to 1 billion smartphones
For wellness today’s customer are already doing sport, are
technophile, have money to spare for fun and are very concerned
with wellbeing. Tomorrow the chase for public health
91. Early-user typology
Types
Objectives
Sportive
Geek
Test, app development
Heath-conscious
Self-knowledge, healthy life
Patient
Risk prevention, disease
management
Carer
35
Performance, risk-management,
socialization
Monitoring of dependent people
(e.g. child, elderly, handicapped)
92. Health insurers' health prevention programs have
started leveraging apps and devices
In 2012, Aetna's CEO Mark Bertolini said it is no longer in the insurance business, it is in the
information business. In 2013, Aetna launched CarePass, an iPhone app and website for
managing your fitness
36
93. Are wearables useful or scary ?
Health improvement
Big brother
People (& pet) safety
Hacking
Home automation
Bugs
Energy management
Attention dispersion
37
94. •
•
control thanks to a personal dashboard
•
transparency
•
38
security
support for all its customers and users
95. Orange started retailing smart devices and services
Orange Romania
Orange Horizons
Orange Poland
Orange Spain
39
Orange France
96. Orange provides a multi-purpose open cloud
User data is aggregated and securely hosted by Orange
Innovative cross-data services are developed by ecosystem partners plugging into the Orange cloud hub
40
97. More than gadgets these new devices are providing new
use cases and even creating new interfaces
Augmented Reality becomes really possible with natural
interfaces
41
Wearables are much more adapted than smartphones
for new usages and they use them for communications
Will people adapt them is still a question ?
102. ONSTAR GLOBAL GROWTH
More than 17 YEARS experience in the
CONNECTED VEHICLE SPACE
24/7/365 Service for 6.5M Global Subscribers:
¶
More than 789 Million subscriber interactions to date
¶
We answer 4 calls per second
¶
Assisted in nearly 2.4 Million emergency situations
¶
Nearly 180 Million navigation requests delivered
113. About Moovit
•
•
•
•
•
Founded Nov 2011
Venture funded
3,000,000+ users
Coverage in 22 countries, 100 cities
Top Navigation app on Google Play & Apple App
Store
Real Time, Public Transit Info, Navigation & Ticketing App
2
115. What’s the best
way to my
destination now?
When will my
next bus arrive?
Will it be
overcrowded?
When will I
arrive to my
destination?
Uncertainty & wasted time frustrate public transport riders
4
116. Providing the most complete
real-time PT information,
combining agencies data with
the power of the crowd.
5
117. Sensing transit and users location to provide realtime transit information and directions
6
131. • A
unique
and
disrupIve
soluIon
using
Internet
Of
Moving
Things
and
crowd
source
concepts
for
locaIon
and
communicaIon
• A
Wireless
wristband
providing
parent’s
peace
of
mind
for
child’s
indoor
and
outdoor
locaIon
132. The
DarioTM
Plaorm
Healthcare Providers
•
•
•
Health Systems
•
•
•
Real time patient data portal
Proactive alerts when patients need help
Clinical decision support
Population risk management
Clinical trial support
Outcome analysis
• Secure data storage and access
• Provide real time trend analysis
• Delivers proactive actionable insights
Person Living with
Diabetes
Caregiver
•
•
Health alerts
Advocacy tools
•
•
•
Track & share data
Testing & medication reminders
Insights & support