What's Looming Large in September IoT Connectivity Events?

2023-09-20 17:01:03
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Illustration: © IoT For All

September is always a busy month for trade shows and conferences and 2023 is no exception for connectivity events. This month Transforma Insights’ analysts will speak at several major events that are focused on the Internet of Things, particularly IoT connectivity.

These include Digital X in Cologne, The Things Conference in Amsterdam, Mobile World Congress in Las Vegas, and then back to Amsterdam for the IoT Tech Expo Europe. Along the way, our analysts will chair, moderate, and speak in various sessions. In this post, we provide a preview of what we think will be the hot topics that will dominate the conversation around IoT connectivity at these events.

Consolidation and M&A

The last few months have seen a flurry of acquisitions in the IoT connectivity space. Since the earth-shattering news that Ericsson was offloading its IoT assets to Aeris Communications, we have seen KORE acquire the IoT assets of Twilio, Wireless Logic continue its spending spree by picking up Blue Wireless and Webbing, emnify acquire Brazil’s Cinco Telecom, and Renesas buying Sequans.

And there have been others. Not only that but there are some monster deals in the pipeline, including the eventual spin-off of Vodafone’s IoT unit. The rumor mill will no doubt continue, and there may even be an announcement or two.

The important thing though is what these seismic shifts in the provider landscape tell us about what’s going on in the space. In part, it’s a reflection of the economics.

We’ve spoken many times about how price margins are eroding (see, for instance, our commentary on $1 IoT from two years ago). They can’t erode for long until that starts to stimulate consolidation in a drive for greater scale. And that’s not just MVNOs, it also includes MNOs.

What’s also interesting is that 15 years ago the market for IoT connectivity was dominated by a set of specialist providers, essentially MVNOs. In the intervening years the MNOs, by definition generalists, spotted an opportunity and went for it.

Now we’re heading back to a world of specialists. In some cases, with MNOs retrenching a bit away from connectivity. In order with the carving out of some MNO IoT businesses to act that way. Deutsche Telekom, for instance, formed a new legal entity DT IoT and Telefonica established an MVNO to focus on IoT.

These types of issues, and analysis of the strategies of MNOs and MVNOs in IoT, are all examined in depth in a range of our reports, including the annual Communications Service Provider IoT Peer Benchmarking 2023.

eSIM and iSIM

In May 2023, the GSMA unveiled the latest standard for remote SIM provisioning (RSP) for eSIM, the SGP.32 “IoT” variant.

Earlier variants had some limitations, for instance, SGP.22 “Consumer” is only applicable for use cases where the device has a sophisticated UI and a person operating it, and SGP.02 M2M doesn’t support constrained networks (such as NB-IoT) well and has limitations in terms of flexibility and control for the customer. SGP.32 promises greater capabilities, and we expect it to be the dominant technology.

But eSIM, and particularly SGP.32 IoT, is not without uncertainty. While the technology is a definite upgrade and simplification, it is still not clear how the commercial aspects of managing multiple carrier relationships and platform integration might work.

Furthermore, we also note that several mobile network operators have expressed concerns that SGP.32 represents a significant loss of control for them over managing the customer connection. While MVNOs will wholeheartedly embrace the technology we will likely see some reticence from MNOs, at least until there is strong demand from end customers to provide the capability.

The integrated SIM (iSIM) also has a lot of promise. Rather than being a dedicated component, this puts the SIM application as a function on a shared System on Chip (SoC), typically the cellular chipset, with dedicated hardware security protection.

It was standardized in 2020 and created a significant change in the hardware landscape, with additional complexity for chipset vendors. Even today it is not extensively supported by all chipset vendors.

In the next 10 years, we expect iSIM to become the dominant form factor, as it allows maximum flexibility, reduces component size, and reduces cost and power consumption. The question is how fast the technology will arrive.

Connectivity Management Platforms

The CMP world was once a very stable one. There were two big vendors (Cisco and Ericsson), a few alternatives, and a few MNOs decided to do their own thing. But the price erosion noted above has driven a set of new dynamics.

Operators that used to pay up to 50 cents per month for a connection on a CMP will now laugh at the idea, facing as they are a typical revenue per connection much lower than that. Ericsson couldn’t make its platform profitable, offloading it at the point when it was losing $100 million per year.

At the same time Cisco has been pushing up prices for its Control Center product to make it profitable (it seems to have managed to do that). So, disruption from the supply side and a shift in the underlying economics mean that several MNOs will look around for alternative platforms that are more cost-effective.

The likes of floLIVE, Mavoco, 1oT, and Eseye are poised to take advantage. We wait with interest to see if there are any announcements in September. We expect there will be.

The changing dynamics in the CMP landscape are something that we have commented on extensively in the last few months. Check out the recent free Position Paper, and subscriber-only Key Topic Insight report linked in our press release “New Transforma Insights Study Identifies A Major Transition in IoT Connectivity Management Platforms.”

Devices Are the New Battleground

We’re increasingly seeing connectivity events being bundled with device expertise. Not only are we seeing more sophisticated connectivity offers launched by the IoT module makers, such as Quectel and Telit, but also many connectivity providers are finding great value in ensuring that hardware and connectivity work perfectly in tandem, including the likes of BICS, Eseye, and KORE (which has a very interesting line in hardware fulfillment).

Why? There are a few reasons. Firstly, there’s a growing realization that you can’t simply throw connectivity into any device and assume it will work fine. You need to optimize the two together.

Not only that, but the evolution of the SIM to eSIM and (eventually) iSIM means the connectivity is increasingly tightly integrated with the hardware. This will be a topic of discussion at upcoming connectivity events.

What are we expecting to hear in the coming month or two? More connectivity providers are finding better ways to stitch the connectivity and the associated devices together in a more consistent way.

Satellite as Redundancy for Cellular

There has been a lot of talk at connectivity events about satellite connectivity for IoT recently, particularly Low Earth Orbit (LEO) satellite using 3GPP Release 17 Non-Terrestrial Network (NTN) 5G connectivity. There are a few reasons to be concerned about the LEO space.

There are too many companies going after the market and the economics will be pretty challenging if there’s a lot of competition. We expect a shake-out in the space. There has also been a bit of a problem with packaging and communicating the offerings.

The important thing is that satellite connectivity should be packaged up as a support act to cellular, providing guaranteed connectivity even when terrestrial networks aren’t available. There’s not much of a market for applications that only need satellite.

But there’s a very good opportunity for selling cellular-based connectivity that has satellite redundancy. We expect that to be where the focus is during the latest round of discussions on the space. We saw a well-thought-through approach such as this in the Deutsche Telekom/Skylo announcement at the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona in February. We expect some more imminently.

5G

At Mobile World Congress Las Vegas, particularly, we’re expecting to be talking 5G, in all its glory. Matt Hatton will present his “IoT State of the Nation” at the 5G IoT Summit as part of the event.

It’s clear that for 5G New Radio private networks are in the running. On the wide-area IoT side, there are some bright spots, notably connected cars, but the vast majority of connections are still low bandwidth, and very little needs ultra-reliable low latency communication (URLLC).

It’s the massive machine-type communications (mMTC) bit of 5G that’s making the running. LTE-M is going strong, taking up the slack in many cases for the sunsetting of 2G.

NB-IoT is somewhat limited outside of China. And the first version of RedCap is unlikely to move the needle much in the IoT market. We’ll certainly be speaking about how the adoption of each of those is panning out, as well as alternatives like Cat 1 bis. And roaming keeps coming up as a topic, and a challenge.

LoRaWAN/Sigfox

Convergence is in the air in the world of LPWA. We expect to see many different takes on the theme of converged solutions that use multiple types of LPWA bearers.

These will likely range from Sigfox to the cellular ecosystem (subsets of which are now somewhat resigned to go with the flow), and with the LoRa folks who will be out in force at The Things Conference in Amsterdam landing somewhere in-between.

It will also be interesting to watch for traction with any LoRa-based solutions that rely on wide-area connectivity. Until now, the LoRa ecosystem has mostly been characterized by campus-type or smart city-scale network coverage, or even just coverage for smart building solutions.

But with the likes of Everynet now supporting nationwide LoRaWAN rollouts, many new IoT applications will have the potential to be supported by LoRa technologies. And they’re the types of IoT applications that tend to come in large volumes. The times they are changing.

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  • iSIM

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参考译文
九月物联网连接性活动中的重要议题是什么?
图解:© IoT For All → 九月总是展会和会议的繁忙月份,2023年也不例外。本月,Transforma Insights 的分析师们将出席多个专注于物联网(IoT),尤其是物联网连接性的大型活动,其中包括科隆的 Digital X、阿姆斯特丹的 The Things Conference、拉斯维加斯的 Mobile World Congress,以及回到阿姆斯特丹参加 IoT Tech Expo Europe。在这一系列活动中,我们的分析师将主持、主持讨论并发表演讲。在本文中,我们提前预测了这些活动上围绕物联网连接性讨论的主要热点议题。**整合与并购** 过去几个月中,物联网连接领域出现了一波收购热潮。自从埃里克森(Ericsson)将其物联网资产出售给 Aeris Communications 的震撼性新闻传出后,我们看到 KORE 收购了 Twilio 的物联网资产,Wireless Logic 继续其收购狂潮,买下了 Blue Wireless 和 Webbing,emnify 收购了巴西的 Cinco Telecom,而瑞萨电子(Renesas)则收购了 Sequans。还有其他一些收购案正在酝酿中。此外,还有一些大型交易即将出炉,包括沃达丰(Vodafone)物联网部门的最终拆分。流言还将继续,或许还会有两三个正式的宣布。但更重要的是,这些供应商格局的剧变告诉了我们行业发生了哪些变化。一方面,这反映了行业经济的变化。我们多次谈到过价格利润率的下降(例如两年前我们对“1美元物联网”的评论)。价格利润率下降一段时间后,必然刺激行业整合,以追求更大的规模经济。这不仅适用于虚拟运营商(MVNOs),也包括移动运营商(MNOs)。有趣的是,15年前物联网连接市场主要由一些专业公司主导,这些公司本质上就是虚拟运营商。后来,作为通才的移动运营商发现了机会并进入了市场。而现在,我们正在回归一个专业公司主导的时代,某些情况下,移动运营商甚至开始从连接业务上逐步撤退。一些运营商正将其物联网业务剥离出来,以专业方式运营,例如德国电信成立了新的法律实体 DT IoT,而 Telefonica 则建立了 MVNO,专注于物联网。我们关于 MVNO 和 MNO 在物联网中的战略问题,以及更深入的分析,都可以在我们的一系列报告中找到,包括年度《通信服务提供商物联网同行基准报告 2023》。**eSIM 与 iSIM** 2023年5月,GSMA 发布了 eSIM 的远程 SIM 配置(RSP)最新标准 SGP.32 的“物联网”版本。之前的版本存在一些限制,例如,SGP.22 “消费者”版本仅适用于设备具备复杂用户界面并由人操作的情况,而 SGP.02 M2M 在支持受限网络(如 NB-IoT)方面表现不佳,缺乏灵活性和客户控制能力。SGP.32 承诺了更强的功能,并有望成为主流技术。但 eSIM,特别是 SGP.32 版本的物联网应用,仍然存在不确定性。虽然技术上是升级和简化,但如何管理多个运营商关系以及平台整合的商业层面仍有待明确。此外,我们也注意到一些移动运营商担忧,SGP.32 会削弱他们对客户连接的控制力。虽然虚拟运营商会热情拥抱这项技术,但移动运营商可能会持犹豫态度,至少直到终端客户有强烈需求时才会改变立场。集成 SIM(iSIM)也具有很大潜力。与传统独立模块不同,iSIM 将 SIM 应用作为一个功能嵌入到共享的系统芯片(SoC)中,通常为蜂窝芯片组,并通过专用硬件安全保护。它于2020年标准化,对硬件格局产生了重大影响,同时为芯片组厂商带来了额外的复杂性。即使到今天,并非所有芯片组厂商都广泛支持 iSIM。在未来10年内,我们预计 iSIM 将成为主流形式,因为它提供了最大的灵活性、减少了组件体积,并降低了成本和功耗。问题是这项技术的普及有多快。**连接管理平台(CMP)** 过去,连接管理平台(CMP)市场非常稳定。市场上有两个大厂商(思科和爱立信),还有几个替代方案,以及一些移动运营商自行开发平台。但如上所述的价格下降,推动了新的动态。运营商们以前每月要为连接支付高达50美分,现在面对远低于该水平的收入,早已不屑于这种收费模式。爱立信的平台未能盈利,最终亏损每年1亿美元,被迫将其出售。与此同时,思科正通过提高其 Control Center 产品的价格,以实现盈利(似乎已成功做到)。因此,来自供应端的颠覆和基础经济的转变,意味着多个 MNO 将寻找更具成本效益的替代平台。像 floLIVE、Mavoco、1oT 和 Eseye 等公司正准备抓住这一机会。我们期待9月份是否有任何宣布,预计将有相关动态。我们过去几个月已经详细评论了 CMP 市场格局的变化。请查看我们最近发布的免费《立场文件》,以及我们新闻稿中链接的订阅者专属《关键主题洞察报告》:“Transforma Insights 新研究报告揭示物联网连接管理平台的重大转型”。**设备成为新的战场** 我们越来越多地看到连接性会议与设备专业知识的融合。不仅物联网模块制造商(如 Quectel 和 Telit)推出了更复杂的连接解决方案,而且许多连接提供商也发现,确保硬件与连接性完美配合具有巨大价值,包括 BICS、Eseye 和 KORE(它在硬件执行方面有非常有趣的产品)。为什么?有几个原因。首先,人们越来越意识到,你不能随便把连接加到任何设备上并假设它能正常工作。你需要将两者优化结合。不仅如此,随着 SIM 向 eSIM 的演进,最终到 iSIM,连接性将越来越紧密地整合到硬件中。这将成为即将举行的连接性会议上的讨论主题。在接下来的几个月中,我们期待听到更多连接性提供商找到将连接性与其相关设备更加一致地整合的方法。**卫星作为蜂窝的冗余** 最近在连接性会议中,关于卫星连接性的讨论越来越多,特别是使用 3GPP Release 17 非地面网络(NTN)5G 连接的低轨(LEO)卫星。我们对 LEO 有一些担忧。太多公司进入市场,如果竞争激烈,经济将面临巨大挑战。我们预计该领域将发生洗牌。此外,包装和传达其产品方面也存在问题。关键在于,卫星连接应被视为蜂窝网络的辅助,即使地面网络不可用时也能提供可靠的连接。对仅需要卫星连接的应用市场并不大。但将蜂窝连接与卫星冗余结合销售则有巨大机会。我们预计,这是本轮讨论的重点。我们在2月份巴塞罗那 Mobile World Congress 上看到的德国电信与 Skylo 的合作就是一个深思熟虑的方案。我们预计还会看到更多类似案例。**5G** 在拉斯维加斯的 Mobile World Congress 上,我们将尤其期待围绕5G展开的讨论,涵盖其方方面面。Matt Hatton 将在该活动的5G IoT峰会上发表他的“物联网国家现状”演讲。很明显,5G 新空口(NR)私有网络正在成为焦点。在广域物联网领域,有一些亮点,尤其是联网汽车,但绝大多数连接仍然是低带宽,几乎没有对超高可靠低延迟通信(URLLC)的需求。5G 中推动发展的其实是大规模机器类通信(mMTC)部分。LTE-M 正在强劲增长,承担了许多2G网络退役后的空缺。NB-IoT 在中国以外的地区有所限制。而 RedCap 的首个版本不太可能在物联网市场上掀起太大波澜。我们当然会讨论每种技术的采用情况,以及 Cat 1 bis 等替代方案。同时,漫游问题依然是一个热点和挑战。**LoRaWAN/Sigfox 聚合** 在低功耗广域网(LPWA)世界中,LoRaWAN 和 Sigfox 的融合正成为趋势。我们预计将看到各种形式的解决方案,采用多种 LPWA 承载方式。这些解决方案可能从 Sigfox 延伸至蜂窝生态系统(其中一些子集已逐渐接受潮流),也可能介于 Sigfox 与 LoRa 之间,后者将在阿姆斯特丹的 The Things Conference 上大举登场。我们也将关注基于 LoRa 的解决方案是否能在广域连接中取得进展。迄今为止,LoRa 生态系统主要集中在校园级或智慧城市规模的网络覆盖,甚至只是智能建筑解决方案的覆盖上。但随着 Everynet 等公司开始支持全国范围的 LoRaWAN 部署,许多新的物联网应用将有潜力被 LoRa 技术支持。而这些物联网应用往往具有批量部署的特性。时代在改变。推文分享分享邮件 5G蜂窝连接eSIMiSIM → 5G蜂窝连接eSIMiSIM
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