M2M Journal: Short-range low power wireless devices and M2M / Internet-of-things

Today, the devices used in the “last 100 meters” are typically not connected. The wide-area network is to a larger extent connected e.g. through smartphones, home routers (e.g. ADSL routers) and GSM/3G/4G Routers. Short range wireless technologies will play an important role in M2M solutions where small devices (such as various sensors) are connected to services on a wide-area Internet network.

m2m_iot

Source:Rolf Nilsson connectBlue AB

Global reach as Wireless Logic bearer services expand

2014 has seen Wireless Logic evolve its choice of connectivity with formalised agreements with satellite provider INMARSAT and mobile network operator Three UK.

Commenting on the latest additions to the network partnerships already in place, Oliver Tucker, CEO says: “Cost and choice of communication in the connected world are key drivers for organisations developing M2M and IoT programmes. We are committed to provide the right communication platforms for the job in hand, and this means we must present a portfolio that enables genuinely one-stop shopping. The economics of satellite and related hardware are now in reach to a broader audience. Bringing global leader INMARSAT to our customer base creates a border-less platform where previously out-of-reach devices are now in touch, with realistic costings. We have brought in specialist knowledge to help us  deliver appropriate guidance and expertise for customers requiring satellite connectivity.”

Three UK now completes the UK connectivity offering by joining Wireless Logic’s 17 UK and European mobile networks. “We are pleased to welcome the Three UK specialist data network into our fold and are confident that users will want to consider this fully wrapped mobile platform in conjunction with our overlaid managed services,” comments Philip Cole, European Sales Director.

Source: Wireless Logic

Gemalto wins Pan-European Award of Excellence for enabling NFC Smart Cities.

Gemalto has announced that the Smart Urban Spaces (SUS) project has won the Information Technology for European Advancement Award of Excellence for enabling contactless smart cities through the rollout of NFC context-based services. This project is part of EUREKA, a Pan-European initiative uniting 38 member countries with the shared goal to support companies and research institutes in transnational R&D projects. The project was developed by a Gemalto-led consortium of 20+ partners from all over Europe and aims at introducing interoperable e-city services based on the latest mobile technologies and ubiquitous mobile computing techniques. 
  
Smart Urban Spaces provides software building blocks and service management platforms for urban applications such as public transportation, day care, smart billboards, event information and taxi fare payment. Some 35 NFC pilot applications have been developed across 11 cities members of the consortium including Bilbao, Caen, Helsinki, Oulu, Sevilla and Valencia. As an example, the city of Caen is using Gemalto’s Allynis Trusted Service Management (TSM) service for its NFC mobile ticketing program launched in June 2013.
 
Gemalto is honoured to be at the heart of the Smart Urban Spaces project and contributing its expertise in securing contactless applications and servicing platforms,” commented Philippe Cambriel, Gemalto President for Europe, Mediterranean and CIS. “SUS brings together top-tier industrial players, small and medium-sized enterprises, academics and user organizations from all countries to put Europe at the forefront of developing digital cities of the future. Gemalto provides in particular the trust environment that enables those various stakeholders to plug into the SUS infrastructure to quickly deploy a broad range of innovative NFC services, while ensuring that end users’ digital identities are protected.”
 
The SUS project has been sponsored by the Public Authorities of Finland, France and Spain
Partners include: AICIA, Applicam, Avanzis, Bonwal, CBT, CEV Group, City of Bilbao, City of Caen, City of Gijon, City of Helsinki, City of Oulu, City of Paterna, City of Pobla de Vallbona, City of Saint-Lô, City of Seville, City of Valencia, CreativIT, ESI Tecnalia, Euskatel, Fara, Forum Virium, Gemalto, Intelligéré, NXP Semiconductors FR, Okode, Palma Tools, Province of Guizpuzcoa, Telvent/ARCE, Thales, Top-Tunniste, Uni of Bordeaux 1 (LABRI), Uni of Caen (PRINT), Visual Tools, VTT Technical Research Centre of Finland and WhileOnTheMove.
 
Source: Gemalto

GSM/GPRS modem with built in program for connecting serial legacy equipment.

 

The DinBox GSM/GPRS is a serial V.24/RS-232 DIN-rail Quadband (850/900/1800/1900 MHz) GSM and EGSM/GPRS modem for M²M applications.The standard DinBox GPRS modem firmware in Open AT allows the modem to be connected serially by RS-232 with a non-IP enabled serial device and to communicate with the host system by IP number and port number, using GPRS, without disturbing the transparent communication between the meter and the host. This is very useful when upgrading non-IP enabled meter or serial units to IP without having to change the existing application.

http://www.gprsmodems.co.uk/acatalog/Industrial_Quad_Band_Modems.html

Erco Gener GenPro40e 4G/3G/GPRS Industrial Modem.

 

Entirely dedicated to the wireless markets throughout the word, the GenPro 40e allows a simple and rapid integration of 4G – LTE (850 / 900 / 1800 / 2100 / 2600 MHz), 3G and 3G+ (HSPA / UMTS)  Quad-Band (850/900/1900/2100 MHz) as well as Quad-Band GSM/GPRS/EDGE (850/900/1800/1900 MHz) connectivities into M2M applications.

For European use, the GenPro 40e can now operate in 4G on the 850 / 900 / 1800 / 2100 / 2600 MHz bands, LTE with peak downlink speeds up to 100 Mbps and peak uplink speeds up to 50 Mbps.

The GenPro 40e is a robust, reliable and long life product.

Its high-speed USB interface allows it to manage and optimise the performances of 4G high-speed networks.

http://www.gprsmodems.co.uk/acatalog/3G_4G_Modems_developed_from_Sierra_Wireless_Modules.html

Sierra Wireless HSPA+ 3G Industrial Programmable Modem

 

The AirLink FX100 is an industrial grade programmable 3G modem with Serial and USB interfaces. It supports penta-band 3G HSPA+ and quad band 2G GSM/GPRS/EGDE.The AirLink FX100 3G modem comes with audio, GPS and digital I/O interfaces. It also comes with an Expansion card (X-card) interface.

 

The FX100 3G modem supports the AirVantage M2M Cloud Management Services and Enterprise Platform. It also supports the Open AT Application Framework. The Open AT Application Framework is a complete software package for developing embedded M2M applications in standard C/C++.

 

  • Frequency: 3G – Worldwide Coverage
  • Frequency Range: Penta-band HSPA: 800/850/900/1900/2100MHz, Quad-Band GSM/GPRS/EDGE: 850/900/1800/1900MHz
  • Data speeds: 14.4 Mbps downlink, 5.76 Mbps uplink
  • Connection: Serial & USB
  • GPS: Yes

http://www.gprsmodems.co.uk/acatalog/Sierra_Wireless_Airlink_FXT_Series_programmable_gateways.html#fx100″

 

Internet of Things part 2 (I.O.T.)

The second in a series.

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We’ve already written about why 2014 is really, finally the year that the “internet of things”—that effort to remotely control every object on earth—becomes visible in our everyday lives.

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But most of us don’t recognize just how far the internet of things will go, from souped-up gadgets that track our every move to a world that predicts our actions and emotions. In this way, the internet of things will become more central to society than the internet as we know it today. The web will survive, just as email survived the arrival of the web. But its role will be reduced to that of a language for displaying content on screens, which are likely to be more ubiquitous but less necessary. Here’s a closer look at the internet of things that’s already here, and where it’s headed.

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The internet of things will create a world of “invisible buttons”

Rooms that know when you’re present and how you’re feeling can illuminate themselves appropriatelyPhilips

The pioneer species of the internet of things is the smartphone. For example, every time we take a smartphone with us in a car, it beams information on our location and speed to Google. The result is real-time traffic information that can be used by everyone.

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That smartphones gather traffic data without their users ever being aware that they’re doing so shows how the internet of things replaces the internet-related actions we already know—click a button, navigate a webpage—with context. This awareness, especially as it relates to where we are in the physical world, what time of day it is, and whatever other data Google and other companies have about us, leads to what Amber Case, a researcher for mapping company Esri, calls “invisible buttons.” An invisible button is simply an area in space that is “clicked” when a person or object—in this case, a smartphone—moves into that physical space. It could be as small as a two-inch square on top of a conventional credit card reader, to enable payments, or as large as a room, which might want to know that you have entered or left so that it can turn on or off the lights. With Phillips’ Hue and countless other smart lights, this is already possible.

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If invisible buttons were just rigidly defined on-off switches, they wouldn’t be terribly useful. But because the actions they trigger can be modified by an infinitude of other variables, such as the time of day, our previous actions, the actions of others or what Google knows about our calendar, they quickly become a means to program our physical world.

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That we currently need a cell phone to act as a proximity sensor is just an artifact of where the technology is at present. The same can be accomplished with any number of other internet-connected sensors. GE and Quirky’s motion, sound, light, temperature and humidity sensor, called Spotter, is a good example. It’s even possible to determine proximity indirectly—for example, internet-connected smart energy systems can figure out you’re home the moment you switch on a light.

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Apple’s play for the internet of things

Apple stores can already pinpoint your location with unprecedented accuracy.AP Photo/Mark Lennihan

Apple seems keen on the idea of invisible buttons. While the company has been relatively quiet about the technology, it recently rolled out something called iBeacon, which allows any newer iPhone or Android phone to know its position in space with centimeter precision. You can think of iBeacon as a version of GPS that works indoors, and which is also more precise. This allows the developers using Apple’s technology to define “invisible buttons” of just about any dimensions.

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What do Apple and its consumers get from this innovation? Apple gets more access to its customers; its customer get more access to its stuff. Apple just rolled out iBeacon technology in its own retail stores

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Right now companies like Estimote are pitching to retailers the hardware “beacons” that broadcast the signal required to make iBeacon work. That Apple has made iBeacon open enough to work with third-party hardware providers like Estimote shows that Apple wants the standard to spread. Notably, the signals broadcast by any iBeacon-compatible radio (which broadcast signals known as Bluetooth Low Energy) can also be picked up by Android and Windows phones, which shows that Apple is trying to dominate a technology that could become ubiquitous across phones. This means invisible spatial buttons that could be so small that touching your smartphone, smartwatch or other equipped device to a surface will allow you to press that “button.” There’s nothing stopping this technology from be squeezed into something as small as a credit card, or being embedded in clothing or other discrete wearable devices like fitness sensors, wristwatches or even temporary tattoos.

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Anticipatory computing and the end of interfaces

The more we reveal to Google, the better our user experience will be.AP Photo/Paul Sakuma

Objects on our bodies (health monitors, smart glasses) and in our homes and businesses (smart thermostats, lights, appliances and security systems) can all be programmed to interact in complicated and unexpected ways once the internet knows that we’re present and what our intentions might be. For example, a smart home might know when you wake up based on the activity monitor on your wrist, and begin warming up the house, brewing a pot of coffee and switching off your security system. That’s the vision of companies like Smartthings, which is in the forefront of making the internet of things accessible to people other than techies and hobbyists.

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These pro-active actions are all part of what some call “anticipatory computing.” Invisible buttons and other contextual information about you will allow the internet to do more than facilitate your needs. It would actually anticipate them. Google Now is a good example of the potential of this technology. As long as you opt in, Google has access to every meaningful store of explicit data about yourself you create—email, contacts, calendars, social media—and plenty of implicit ones as well, like your web-browsing history. Adding location and other physical inputs to that data allows Google Now to do everything from sending youhyperlocal news items targeted to the precise neighborhood in which you live tooffering information about the television show you’re watching at that exact moment.

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So what’s required for more companies to tap into anticipatory computing? There are companies that specialize in “reality mining,” which refers to using data to track the remarkable predictability of our daily lives. This is a potential bonanza for marketers who want to target ads to particular times and places. Marketers are already starting to use this technology to target both online and real-world advertising (like billboards).

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Wearable computers will keep us connected at all times

The UP wristband is one of the first wearables that can trigger actions in other smart, connected objects.Jawbone

The next layer of the internet of things will require combining disparate streams of data “mined” from reality—everything from your location to the members of your social network. This is called sensor fusion, a task that is basic to all big data projects. Knowing where you are throughout the day won’t mean much, but add in data about who else is present and a computer algorithm can tell you how likely you are to get the flu. Finding the connections—in other words, meaning—in all this data is key to making it useful. “We have frictionless data gathering but we don’t have frictionless correlation,” Esri’s Case said at last year’s Le Web conference. “If you have to be a data scientist to do it, then it’s totally wrong.”

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Mike Bell, head of the new devices group at Intel, says that the future of smart devices, “whether it’s a wearable [computer] or a next-generation tablet replacement, will have a real user interface, but it’s not necessarily visual.” Bell, whose primary interest is wearable computing, can’t talk about what Intel is currently working on, but I’d guess from our conversations that it’s more likely to look like a wristband fitness monitor than another cell phone.

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In other words, the internet of things will replace the internet, but not by giving us another way to explicitly tell computers what we want. Instead, by sensing our actions, the internet-connected devices around us will react automatically, and their representations in the cloud will be updated accordingly. In some ways, interacting with computers in the future could be more about telling them what not to do—at least until they’re smart enough to realize that we are modifying our daily routine.

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Sensing and responding to your needs, wants and emotions

There’s no need to post a status update about how you’re feeling when your smart gadgets already know.Good Night Lamp

If this all sounds like mind reading, that’s because in a way it is. Munjal Shah, entrepreneur in residence at Charles River Ventures, surveyed a thousand peopleabout what super powers they would acquire if they could. The most popular answer was “speak all languages,” but the number two answer might surprise you: the ability to comfort anyone. Shah had conducted the survey in order to determine what sort of businesses could be built to give people these abilities (the first one, universal translation, is at least plausible). Comforting a friend is, he concluded, exactly the sort of thing the internet of things would be good at. First, our connected devices will be able to monitor our state—inactivity could indicate sickness or depression. And maybe we’ve recently posted on social media about a tragedy that befell us. Text alerts are sent out to friends, asking them to reach out, and voila—in as much as mediated communication is any sort of comfort, no one need ever feel lonely again.

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Once our possessions can both sense and respond, and are directed for the most part by computers, the world becomes something like a living creature. “We believe the digital world and the physical world are merging, and that done correctly what this will do is create a virtual representation of all of our physical devices online,”said Jeff Hagins, chief technology officer of Smartthings. “What that will accomplish is that it will make the physical world programmable. When we change the digital representation, the physical world will change in response.” If your goal is to fuse your mind and body with the internet, this is good news. But if you were hoping that in the future, getting away from it all would be as simple as switching off your mobile phone, you’re in for a rude surprise.

Source: Quartz – Published by Christopher Mims

2G/3G Signal Test Set

3G/GPRS/GSM Signal Strength Tester - TS_BM_0325

3G/GPRS/GSM Signal Strength Tester operating on 850/900/1800/1900/2100 Mhz frequencies.Popular as a test tool for installers and engineers working with industrial, cellular enabled equipment, TS_BM_0325 operates out of the box enabling users to find the optimum network or antenna site for installing their equipment.TS_BM_0325 operates with or without a SIM card fitted, allowing users either to search for the best network signal without a SIM card, or to locate a particular network, or carry out a GPRS data test.

 

Features

  • Operational on 2.1GHz networks – Detects European 3.5G & 3G UMTS networks
  • Operational on 850/900/1800/1900 MHz networks 9 (Quadband)
  • Allows detailed interrogation of cellsites i.e frequency, network operator, cell ID, signal strength in 3 formats
  • Simple menu command structure and easy to follow instructions
  • Easy to read 1.75 inch display
  • Multi language menu
  • Supplied with ruggedised sleeve, detachable antenna, mains power supply and full documentation

http://www.gprsmodems.co.uk/acatalog/GSM_Signal_Analyser.html#a1316

Powersine Combi PSC3000-12 Inverter/Charger

Powersine Combi PSC3000-12-120 & PSC3500-24-70 
(art.nr. 5018300 & 5018320)

Available soon, the PSC3000-12-120 (Vin=12V, Pout=3kVA, Icharge=120A) and PSC3500-24-70 (Vin=24V, Pout=3.5kVA, Icharge=70A) are two new high power members of the Powersine Combi series. These fully integrated power system solutions from TBS, are a combination of a DC to AC sinewave inverter, programmable battery charger and automatic AC transfer switch.

When AC power is available, the Powersine Combi recharges the house batteries. It also allows any surplus AC power to pass through and power downstream AC loads, such as a television or microwave oven. When AC power is disconnected, the unit inverts DC battery power into clean AC electricity.

On top of this, the AC Input Power Boost feature can temporarily assist weak AC input sources when more power is needed than available. Another feature is AC Input Current Limit. This will automatically reduce the AC input current drawn by the battery charger, when the AC load at the output needs more power. This way, a user selectable current limit level will never be exceeded, preventing the shore supply or generator from being overloaded.

Other features are :

– Fast 30A AC transfer switch
– Two fully programmable 250V/16A relays
– Trigger/action feature with two trigger inputs
– Additional 4A charger output for starter battery
– Remote control capability via TBSLink

Besides the PSC3000-12-120 and PSC3500-24-70, two smaller combi models PSC2000-12-80 and PSC2500-24-50 plus two standard alone inverter models PS3000-12 and PS3500-24 will also become available in the next few months.

Source:TBS Electronics

Distributor:John Andrew Elec Svces Ltd