A group of household-name industrial giants that include Intel, IBM, AT&T, Cisco Systems, and General Electric — along with the US government — revealed on 26 March that they plan to work together to establish engineering standards for the “Internet of Things” (IoT).
The Industrial Internet Consortium will establish common blueprints that machines can use to share information and move data from one place to another — or from one location to several locations. These standards will include not only Internet protocol standards but also metrics such as power levels within connected or non-connected machines, data storage capacity in IT systems, and data traffic control in large networks.
These standards, which almost certainly will take three to five years or more to create and approve, will help software and hardware developers create products with a maximum of efficiency in order to connect the IoT. This means tying together sensors, networks, personal computers, cloud systems, vehicles, retail businesses, large enterprise systems and thousands of other entities.
The White House and several other federal offices are also helping to build the consortium, which certainly will strive to attract many other companies and organisations.
The IoT also now has its own conference, the Internet of Things World Forum. Cisco Systems, which has hitched its star to the concept, hosted the event last autumn in Barcelona.
The Internet of Things refers to the rapid growth in the number of smart devices – from industrial machines to cars to appliances to mobile devices – that currently are or will be connected to the Internet, communicating with each other and generating massive amounts of data.
In a report last year, Cisco forecast that by 2017, there will be 3.6 billion Internet users and more than 19 billion network connections – both fixed and mobile – as well as machine-to-machine (M2M) connections. By 2020, there will be 50 billion devices connected to the Internet.
Today, there are about 12.5 billion devices connected, according to Inbar Lasser-Raab, senior director of enterprise networking marketing at Cisco. In the IoT scenario, Cisco will build on its networking strengths.
“I don’t think anything this big has been tried before, in terms of sweeping industrial cooperation,” GE Vice-President William Ruh, who runs the company’s global software centre, told The New York Times. “This is how we will make machines, people and data work together.”
The group’s first executive director, Richard Soley, is the chief executive of the Object Management Group, a global technology standards group. He told the Times that the new consortium was already seeing interest from overseas companies, including Fujitsu (Japan), Siemens (Germany) and Huawei (China).
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Originally published on eWeek.
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