显示标签为“M2M technology”的博文。显示所有博文
显示标签为“M2M technology”的博文。显示所有博文

2014年1月26日星期日

M2M for a more welcoming hotel industry

M2M for a more welcoming hotel industry
In 2013 a total of 175 million machine-to-machine modules delivered a profit of almost 25 billion dollars, according to the latest edition of M2M Market Report prepared by IDATE. In the next three years that number could climb up to 470 million and the business could reach 40 billion dollars.
M2M technology will expand to all sectors changing the way in which we relate with our homes, work environment or even leisure facilities. In an increasingly global planet where tourism will employ one out of every ten people in the world, we should not lose sight of what M2M could do in the hotel industry.
Till now, M2M technology has found a niche in video surveillance and smart building applications using audio and movement sensors. Fitted with wireless devices, these systems trigger alerts to a centralised security system sending images to the fire-fighters’ department in case of a fire or to the police in case of a robbery.
Modern hotels normally use M2M technology to monitor and manage electricity, air conditioning and other general power resources. They also use it to automate room housekeeping tasks by using a number of devices that are connected to thermostats, lights, door locking systems and other remote controls.
The largest hotel chains are beginning to use M2M technology not only to automate housekeeping activities, but also to make the guests’ life easier and provide them with a more personalised experience.
Through mobile applications, guests can open the doors and blinds of their rooms and adjust the air conditioning system remotely. New innovation projects in the hotel industry, such as THOFU, seek to change even the colour of the rooms’ materials to adapt them to each customer’s own preferences and peculiarities.
M2M has also landed at the points-of-sale terminals enabling payments through vending machines (e.g. to pay for your parking ticket), while facilitating their basic maintenance and the replenishment and collection of coins.
Furthermore, these connected machines, which are integrated with digital signage platforms, can provide guests with additional information, such as the nutrition facts of what they are eating, offers and personalised tourist information, besides videos and multimedia content.
Solutions are currently being developed to automate this type of processes inside rooms, from auto-check-in to the use of the mini bar. The new systems know when some product needs to be replaced and avoid having to count clean and dirt towels, robes and tablecloths by hand.
Many of these applications will be showcased at the Smart Skyscrapers Summit 2014 at the end of April in Dubai. In fact, this event will show the M2M technology that governs some of the most spectacular blocks of offices and hotels on the planet, such as the Marriott Marquis Dubai, the highest building in the world.

2013年9月12日星期四

Five amazing things that M2M technology has made reality

Cybertecture Mirror
There will come a day when new connected inventions will cease to surprise us. But people who work in the M2M industry are not willing to let this day come soon. Our new delivery of ‘Five Amazing things that M2M technology has made reality’ proves it.
A connected mirror
This could fit perfectly in any sci-fi motion picture: imagine waking up and starting to get ready in the morning in front of the mirror, which then reflects back all sorts of information such as your friends’ activity on social media or alerts you on the weather. This is just what the Cybertecture mirror does when connected to a mobile device. But it goes even further. The mirror can help  women with their make up or prepare a fitness program.
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A beer that cancels any kind of cellular signal
The team behind Polar beer defends that bars are places to enjoy with the people around you and a good drink in your hand. They are not places for mobile phones to be the sole focus of people’s attention. To achieve this, they have created a crafty device that eradicates any mobile signal, be it 3G, 4G or Wifi,  in a given place. Just put a bottle of Polar inside the device and people will lose their coverage. 
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Something happens in your home
Canary is a little sensor that measures acceleration, motion and sound. It also has an HD camera that records what happens around it. So, if you put the device in your home, it will alert you when something happens, whenever a normal parameter is altered.


Don’t lose your objects
There are many things that we tend to lose on a daily basis: keys, wallet, handbag, glasses… Tile is a small label that you can fix on to any of these objects in order to have it located.
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Smart socks
We have talked about smart sleepers, smart diapers… smart this and smart that. Well, believe it or not they have now come up with smart socks! It is actually a device attached to them that records stats like calories burned or distance traveled.

2013年7月29日星期一

Use M2M tech to create 'Smart farms' and tackle food scarcity

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The world consumes nearly 3 trillion pounds of meat, fish, fruits and vegetables combined each year, according to figures from the FAO and IFPRI. In 2030, this number will increase to 4 trillion pounds. An ever-increasing population growth just means higher consumption – and technology might be the answer to meet this future demand.
Historically, agriculture and farming are sectors that happily embrace every technological advance that enhances production and reduces cost – something machine-to-machine (M2M) is very good for. M2M technology is a tool of proven effectiveness when applied to food production.
When it comes to agriculture, farmers face a series of challenges that hinder the production of food, from the lack of manpower, to inefficient technology, to the lack of information on weather, fertilizers, and humidity conditions.
These problems are easily resolved with the implementation of M2M technology; transforming a farm into a smart farm.
The solution that most directly involves food production is crop and greenhouse monitoring solutions. This technology consists of a wide range of connected sensors that measure different data such as wind speed, temperature, pressure, humidity etc. It then presents the information to the farmer in an understandable way that allows him to make important decisions based on this data.
Crop solutions, such as the one presented by Four-Faith, allow farmers to maintain crop temperatures by remotely covering or uncovering their crops and clear vinyl greenhouses at night or during cold weather. Before this solution farmers would have to cover the crops manually, leading to a big output of labour and time.
Machine to machine can also be used to control automatic irrigation based on the conditions of the soil. This managed connectivity solution alerts the farmer when an irrigation pivot is malfunctioning, saving enormous amounts of power and time spent checking the pivots periodically, hence improving profitability. M2M also monitors other data of the soil, such as ammonia, fertilizer and pesticide levels.
Farmers can also benefit from solutions of proven efficiency in other industries, like specialized fleet management solutions that allow tracking of the vehicles used in planting and harvesting, monitoring of fuel consumption and providing real time data of the location of every truck, tractor and machine in the farmer’s fleet.
Agriculture is a great reflection on how M2M acts as an enabler in any field it is applied to. Again, controlled automation is key.