Struhsaker said Carnegie is beginning field trials now and is in discussions with companies on a global basis to deploy its IoT solutions. Carnegie expects agricultural IoT to be a growing sector in 2017.
The company put together a series of 2017 predictions that include:
- 5G trials this year “will show promise of the technology but will unveil issues with the targeted 27 GHz frequency band.”
- Comcast will launch a mobile virtual network operator service and participate in the next round of federal spectrum auctions.
- Cable industry efforts to utilize both cellular and Wi-Fi “will likely be based on a Cable Labs-derived standard, which will arrive well ahead of [Third Generation Partnership Project] standards efforts.”
- “All major providers will move to a deep fiber to the curb/pedestal and wireless connection to the premise model,” a hybrid of fiber and wireless that Carnegie says is more cost-effective than direct fiber connections. The exception, the company says, will be Altice.
- Security issues will be a major stumbling block for the home “internet of things” market, and security “will take center stage in consumer and commercial IoT, especially access to critical systems in vehicles of all types.”
- Carnegie also posits that “despite great fanfare for a number of competing standards for public IoT networks in the unlicensed frequency bands, 2017 will see one or more players fail. Non-cellular IoT is more likely to be successful in private network deployment limited to campus/factory, city or farm/ranch coverage.”
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