Indoor IoT and Outdoor IoT - They Need to Become the Same
Patrick BurnsPatrick Burns
Companies competing to sell you their wireless IoT connectivity technology can be thought of as competing in one of two separate “arenas”: an indoor arena or an outdoor arena.
Typically dominated by low power, local area networking (LPLAN) technologies focusing on home automation. ZigBee, Z-Wave, and Control4 are well known examples. Applications beyond home automation include enterprise/industrial automation, whose users reluctantly adopt the same tech (e.g. Zigbee smart meters) or proprietary alternatives (e.g. Honeywell alarm systems).
Most operate in the tragically overcrowded 2.45GHz unlicensed band. Short range, high levels of interference (and returned merchandise), weak battery life. And 99% of their customers are using these technologies for indoor Applications.
Some of these offer real-time indoor location capabilities to help find an object located in a building or warehouse to within a few feet of precision. Since GPS can’t work indoors, this is how it’s done. Some of these also offer mesh networking features, sometimes as a way to overcome the innate short range of the technology, but usually disguised under a marketing gimmick known as “self-healing.”
WiFi is making a new push at joining the indoor IoT arena with a reasonable likelihood of success due to access point footprint, though not sufficiently low power to make a serious run at battery-powered endpoints.
Omitted here: one-way passive RFID (great, niche technology) and one-way Bluetooth low energy (hyper-short range personal area networking, not even local area networking).
Where the most intense IoT connectivity battles are taking place today. Cellular and satcom have promised long range/wide area IoT for years resulting in steady but low volume success, and almost always tied to Applications where mains electric power is available at the endpoint.
Battery-based versions of these have largely failed so far due to form factor, price point, and of course battery life weaknesses. New entrants to the outdoor arena are arriving via long range, low power wide area networking (LPWAN) technologies, which are challenging the need for mains power in long-range outdoor IoT Applications. LoRa and SigFox in unlicensed bands, and NB-IoT, LTE Cat-M, and other LTE-based efforts in licensed bands.
All carry question marks regarding actual vs. promised performance (e.g. NB-IoT) or scalability claims (e.g. LoRa) pending broader adoption, but there is sufficient evidence now to argue we are really turning a corner in bridging low power with long, multi-kilometer range. But nearly all LPWAN Applications being talked about are outdoor-only.
One challenge to the two-arena segmentation approach of the IoT is those Applications that straddle both indoor and outdoor arenas.
Three immediate examples come to mind:
Today, Applications that by definition straddle both arenas must instead compromise and play in one arena.
For example, tracking cattle via short-range ZigBee chokepoints scattered around a ranch. Provides nominal and non-real-time visibility into the location/health of the cow, but well short of what ranchers really need (e.g. being able to find a lost cow somewhere on a 1,000 acre ranch.)
LPWAN solutions for outdoor location rely on GPS. Good for outdoor location, but no good for indoor location. While LPWAN’s can and will be used for indoor sensing applications (e.g. what is the temperature of the sensor in the walk-in freezer?), precise indoor location (e.g. where is Mike’s laptop) is unaddressed in any of the new or emerging LPWAN networking protocols.
Real-time location queries via trilateration using networking stacks like LoRaWAN is unavailable at this time, thus GPS is the near-universal means to achieving real-time outdoor location precision among LPWAN’s.
Low power indoor LAN solutions usually rely on received signal strength or time-based location systems, relying on a series of reference points to assist in calibration. But low power LAN’s (short range, remember) cannot address outdoor Applications.
Thus, indoor-outdoor Applications are a “blind spot” for the Internet of Things, with few straightforward solutions for addressing both short of using multiple radios and exposing a horizontal application opportunity.
Indoor-outdoor feature set requirements: long range-capable, fully bi-directional comms, low power, low price point, and real-time indoor location capabilities.
With LPWAN’s, it’s easy to redraw our landscape maps and create a de facto third, hybrid arena that bridges the first two, which I’ll just call “indoor-outdoor IoT.”
Indoor-outdoor IoT Applications require:
LPWAN’s are a huge step towards solving for the indoor-outdoor IoT. But as solutions today, they are incomplete.
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