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Connected home Borys Tomala Poznań, Hardgroup #4, 2016-02-23

Connected home - market evolution & protocol wars

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Page 1: Connected home - market evolution & protocol wars

Connected home

Borys Tomala

Poznań, Hardgroup #4, 2016-02-23

Page 2: Connected home - market evolution & protocol wars

About me

Currently:● Founder & Head of Product @ CloudThing.io● Contributor @ The Things Network

Previously:● Director, Software R&D @ Novamedia● Embedded Software Engineer @ Samsung R&D

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About CloudThing.io

Full stack Internet of Things solution for:● manufacturers,● implementation companies,● enterprises & municipalities.

Hardware:● connectivity modules,● security & cloud integration inside,● firmware SDK & tools.

Hardware agnostic data platform:● data collection,● secure storage,● advanced analytics.

Service management:● applications API,● services & API keys monitoring,● advanced integrations.

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Agenda

1. Why did we want our homes to be smart?2. Solutions evolution.3. What we really need?4. Protocol wars:

a. WiFib. Z-wavec. Zigbeed. Bluetoothe. Thread

5. What the future brings?6. Conclusion.

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Why did we want our homes to be smart?

1. The Jetsons had it.2. It’s possible!

… … … … 3. There are also some economical benefits.

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Solutions evolution

1975 - X10

First general purpose automation technology.

Switching appliances and dimming lights over powerline from central console.

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Solutions evolution

1990 - Wired specifications

EIB (future KNX)

Twisted-pair based electrical installations control.

- Expensive,- A lot of wires,- Simple automation and control.

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Solutions evolution

2003/2004 - Wireless revolution

Z-wave/Zigbee

Cheapier, easier, faster.Still dumb.

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Solutions evolution

2004-2010 - Wireless evolution

Rules engine

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Solutions evolution

2004-2010 - Wireless evolutionRules engine

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Solutions evolution

2004-2010 - Wireless evolution

● single point of failure,● non-reliable,● some of them depend on Internet

connection,● limited possibilities,● need for setup rules/scenes - dumb.

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Solutions evolution

2010 - now

● “smart” becomes synonym of “dumb”● some of companies started to realize what it’s really about,● introduction of “connected”, “conscious” and “thoughtful” homes,● switching from system-oriented to product-oriented homes.

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What we really need?

We don’t need smart home systems!

We need connected products and smart services, which increase our security, comfort and savings!

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What we really need?

What connected home should lool like?

● no central unit or hub,● no single point of failure,● can’t rely on Internet connection - devices have to talk to each other!● interoperable - products from different manufacturers need to understand each other.● secured,● product-oriented, but the real product is a service, not device!● easy provisioning,● invisible solutions!

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What we really need?

It’s not about control.

It’s about not having to!

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What we really need?

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What we really need?

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Protocol wars

or

“My lightbulb is smarter than your lightbulb!”

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Protocol wars

Requirements for technology:

● low power● no single point of failure,● reliable,● self-healing mesh,● secure

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Protocol wars

Pros:● well-adopted,● high throughput

Cons:● power-hungry,● star-topology (SPoF),● difficult provisioning,● no application layer,● price.

Conclusion:Great for mains-powered devices which need high-throughput (eg. A/V streaming).

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Protocol wars

Pros:● strong market position,● great interoperability within ecosystem

Cons:● only 232 nodes,● non reliable due to long mesh healing,● no direct connection to mobile devices,● latency due to adopted security solutions,● proprietary (one silicon vendor),● slow (100kbps)

Conclusion:Aging technology not ready for future requirements. Fine for non-critical networks (hobbyist, enthusiasts). Promise to keep backward compatibility may kill this protocol.

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Protocol wars

Pros:● field-proven,● up to 65k nodes per network,● self-healing mesh

Cons:● interoperability - application layers are mess,● max throughput 250 kbps,● no direct connection to mobile devices

Conclusion:Great, field-proven (not only in homes) technology with nice 802.15.4 radio, but further development does not depend on Zigbee, but IEEE body.

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Protocol wars

Pros:● great, multichannel radio,● ultra low power,● high-throughput (1 Mbps and will be higher),● mesh is coming mid 2016,● great interoperability,● direct communication with mobile,

Cons:● little number of profiles,● security but getting better,● mesh not proven in field,● IPv6 still fresh and not proven

Conclusion:Strong candidate for winning protocol war, but let’s wait for IPv6 over Bluetooth mesh.

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Protocol wars

Assumptions:● low power,● IP-based,● reliable mesh,● secure and user friendly,● fast adoption by using existing radio silicon.

Why IP:● IPv6 is a future of IoT,● unfified convergence layer for all radio/wired

technologies.

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Protocol wars

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Protocol wars

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Protocol wars

Features:● simple IP bridging,● direct addressability of devices (IPv6),● flexible network,● no SPoF,● secure commisioning process,● low power,● several application layers

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Protocol wars

Application layer:● lack of application layer definition won’t help with

interoperability,● several different application smay run

independently

802.15.4:● nice, field-proven radio but with limited

capabilities,● already exists in millions of products,● it’s not a part of Thread spec, so in future may be

changed.

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Protocol wars

The war is between Bluetooth Smart and Thread.

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What the future brings?

1. There will always be demand for different protocols. The is no one, universal solution for IoT.

2. Bluetooth Smart may be winning technology inside home.3. Thread may be winning technology inside home.4. or...

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What the future brings?

Bluetooth has awesome radio technology on top of which can run 6lowpan. However, since it’s not home-specific doesn’t define well application layers or commisioning.

Thread is based on 6lowpan and core of its specification is security and commisioning. It’s ready for another PHY/MAC technology adoption!

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What the future brings?

Possible future:

Physical/Link

Network/TransportUDP TCP

Zigbee/AllJoyn/OCF/Nest Weave

Application

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What the future brings?

The biggest challenges for future:1. Interoperability.2. Security.3. Provisioning

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Conclusion

For entrepreneurs/ business developers:

1. Do not develop system - focus on product.2. The service is your main product, device is a necessity.3. Do not develop central unit/hub. Routing may be a feature of product, not the

other way.

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Conclusion

For technology developers:

1. Remember about security.2. Future proof your hardware by using both Thread & Bluetooth radio (prepare

OTA process).3. Remember about security.4. IPv6 is a future do not focus on technology not capable of carrying it.5. Remember about security.

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Conclusion

At CloudThing.io we’re working on multiprotocol, future-proof module for connected home:

● Thread & Bluetooth Smart independent networks,● OTA firmware upgrade,● RF & antenna integrated,● Security inside.

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Conclusion

For customers:

1. Do not invest your money in systems.2. Look for opportunities of lowering your costs, improving comfort or solving

issue with your service providers (utilities, insurance) and independent products.

3. Wait if you can, this year will be full of nice connected home solutions.

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Q&A

Q&A

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Thanks!

Don’t forget to subscribe at CloudThing.io!

[email protected]

@BorysTomala@cloudthing_io