Friday, 1 May 2015

Making the most of the internet of things

Digital TV Europe
The concept of Internet of Things (IoT), or a truly interconnected world, where every device and system is smart and can communicate with other devices and systems without human intervention, has been in development for a number of years and is already present in some industries. IDC has somewhat wildly forecast the IoT to be worth over $7 trillion by 2020.
Entertainment is arguably the first sector to push a digital ecosystem closer to consumers in the areas of wearable technology, smart homes and smart cities. While the context today is narrow, the combination of these devices with information gleaned from sensors in cars, thermostats, lighting, or doorbell opens a myriad of possibilities.
For instance, with wearable technology we can finally understand who an audience is and use the combination of their presence, plus other environmental indicators that the devices are communicating, to give content recommendations,” suggests Charles Dawes, product marketing senior director, Rovi. “Other simple examples are already possible, such as controlling your connected lights so the ambience of your living room matches the mood of the film you’re watching.”
To capitalise on the IoT opportunity there has to be a base level of ubiquitous connectivity ensuring that devices are able to communicate no matter where they are. Assuming this infrastructure is in place, then the opportunity is one of building products and services on top “so that consumers can be provided with more personalised, targeted and value added services than ever before,” says Dawes.
Service providers have the opportunity to move outside of the areas they’ve been traditionally bound to. For instance, as smart metering and the connected home takes off, the service provider can build new services around it that integrate the existing voice, data and video solutions with new ways to grow their business.”
Google competition
Multiple System Operators (MSOs) will face stiff competition from internet and CE giants. Through its connected home division Next, Google acquired Revolv (a hardware hub packed with radios for syncing various smart home devices with each other) and security camera company, dropcam. These will be linked to the Android operating system.
Apple is making a similar play with Apple TV, iWatch and iPhone linked to IoS platform HomeKit. Even Facebook is getting in on the act. Its acquisition in January of voice-recognition start-up Wit.Ai is considered its first major foray into IoT. Samsung spent $200m on SmartThings, a Washington DC-based start-up which allows people to sync connected gadgets to a single smartphone app and hardware hub.
Google et al are spending billions of dollars to acquire entry points into the home but MSOs - particularly cable, telcos and to some extent CE companies - are already there. They've amortised investment in remote controls and set top-boxes and are now extending their reach with other devices, such as dongles and Wi-Fi extenders, into multi-service residential gateways. What's more, with existing, trusted, billing relationships with customers, they are better placed than a Apple or a Samsung, to deliver additional services into the home.
This is not a natural evolution of TV everywhere strategy,” explains Guillaume De Saint Marc, snr director, chief technology and architecture office at Cisco. “They [MSOs] have to continue to invest in the cloud since a lot of the business intelligence for IoT will be housed there. Security of the home gateway is another significant issue and an elegant and very powerful way for them to capitalise on their already considerable investment in security for set-top boxes.”
According to Irdeto, operators are best positioned to play a leading role in the connected home, because of their deep awareness of the subscriber base and demographic/market data to determine the 'right' or 'killer' IoT app for their market.
Operators also have experience with multi-service offerings delivered through gateways and complementary devices and an ongoing desire to increase subscriber loyalty and longevity through new and varied services,” says Greg McKesey, vp technology.
The 'screen,' whether fixed big screen or mobile, will be a focal point for virtualizing (and visualizing) all kinds of consumer IoT systems,” McKesey says. “The question each operator has to ask themselves is: should they deploy and offer these services; form partnerships to allow third parties to use their subscriber base as a channel of distribution or simply allow third parties free reign over their subscribers?”
Pay-TV operators could even look to integrate some basic home automation functionality into their offerings. For example, by making the 'smart home' know what to do when an on-demand movie is being played as opposed to live TV, suggest Irdeto.

Perhaps because the on-demand content is available for a fixed time, the user may want the house to be on complete 'do not disturb' for example with phones automatically forwarded to voice mail,” says McKesey. “For live TV, perhaps when a call comes in, the show is paused and once the call is complete, the show could automatically rewind before resuming.”
Cost value equation
According to ARRIS, early security and home automation systems have struggled to gain hold because the cost / value equation didn't add up. “Consumers might like a service which enables them to tune home heating ahead of arrival but they are not prepared to pay $30 a month for it,” says Charles Cheevers, CTO customer premises equipment.
A residential gateway has typically meant a device that provides households voice, video and internet services, but new devices fitted with radios are being created to support IoT protocols from ZWave and ZigBee. This enables the service provider to synchronize with other devices in the home and to perform physical installation / maintenance on third party connected devices with minimal capex. In theory this reduces the cost to the operator and the value passed onto the customer.
The trick is to make sure the MSO is always in the value chain,” says Cheevers. “If they don't do it, then the likes of Google will go over the top and service providers won't be able to add value.”
Service providers like Comcast are already employing product teams of specialists in medical and assisted living solutions and experts in smartgrid and energy management to build its XFinity Home platform.
The bottom line is that operators’ subscribers are being approached by cable providers, ISPs, telcos, utility companies and others with IoT multi-service offerings,” says McKesey. “Operators need to invest in IoT to not just remain competitive; but to remain relevant. The core focus for monetisation for operators will be with incremental subscriptions and a move away from being a dumb pipe provider for the customer.”
Technicolor’s Digital Life suite of apps (IZE), for example, is an open-source IoT platform aggregating different services. Explains Benoit Joly, SVP, marketing, smart home & solutions integration: “Each of these services is delivered by a digital concierge (the Nurse, the Doorman, the Caretaker, etc.) as you know them in real life. So you know exactly which service you are subscribing to, and you can add services as you need, you just pay what you use, exactly just like in the real life. Everyone knows this way to buy services, everyone knows how to use a TV. All of this is extremely simple to understand, hence to adopt.”
Revenue potential
While there is incremental value to be had in providing a service which, for example, displays and controls a connected home's internet devices on a single dashboard on the large living room screen, there is larger revenue potential in verticals such as energy management and health.
In the US in particular, there is a trend toward the monitoring of patients at home rather than in the more expensive environment of a hospital. Wider even than this is 'ageing at home', a somewhat euphemistic term for tending to the growing ageing populace outside of a hospice. The idea is that connected devices in the home, from a wristband to a fridge, could assist in remote monitoring and diagnosing a resident's health, even prompting them when to take medication.
An MSO could develop an app today to tell if someone had died in home,” suggests Cheevers. “They could do this by taking usage data from the broadband router, the number of connected devices and changes in traffic. Is the STB on? If so have channel switching habits changed? With this knowledge you could tell if somebody different was in the house, or if someone had died. I'd pay $1 a month for a service that monitored my parent's home in that way and alerted me of any significant usage change. And there would be no capex for the service provider.”
The economics will take time to build but service providers and the technology companies that traditionally service them such as Rovi, Irdeto, ARRIS, Cisco, Technicolor and Nagra to name a few are working on business cases.
There are predictions that IoT services could bring extra monthly ARPU in the range of $10 - $35 for up to 30% of a MSO's subscriber base. Ageing in place, or for instances when someone is sent home for monitoring after a hospital visit, could could add $300 a month onto MSO turnover, reckon ARRIS.
As is ever the case, owning the network or the STB is no guarantee that consumers will buy new types of services, or actually buy these services from their incumbent broadband or TV provider,” says Simon Trudelle, senior product marketing director at Nagra.
While ARPU may only add up to a fraction of the media and network access services revenues that incumbent operators currently enjoy, there is definite potential for accelerated growth at some point in the next 18 to 24 months.”
Interoperability will be key

For the IoT to become a significant revenue stream then IoT services have to be as easy as plug and play from a consumer's point of view. ARRIS, for example, is working to push what it believes are the more open standards into its devices. These include Open Interconnect Consortium OIC) with Intel and Samsung as founder members, and the AllSeen Alliance, which uses an open-source implementation of Qualcomm's AllJoyn framework to connect devices to one another.

That Qualcomm is a competitor to Intel is seen as one reason for the dual approach, although the OIC wants to broaden the scope from the connected home to include in-car and workplace settings.
Technicolor, a member of the AllSeen Alliance (with Microsoft, Sony, Panasonic, LG, Cisco), contributes Qeo, an open source software language for connected objects and has designed IZE is with Allseen in mind.
Other attempts at macro platform provision include cloud-based networks Ayla Networks and Arrayent. Groups below these IoT frameworks include wireless protocol ZigBee, Smart Things (now Samsung), and Thread which includes Samsung, ARM and Google. Their aim is to promote a single networking standard for the connected home.
Apple's Homekit probably falls somewhere in between. “High level standards may evolve; but this will take years to iron out and the market won’t sit around idly,” says McKesey.
We have a lot of perfectly mature standards already,” says Cisco's Saint Marc. “It's not happening as an ecosystem but as a sum of independent quite successful applications at the device level. How we get to the next stage is an order of magnitude more complex. It will need to connect everything together and yet be very simple and secure for the end user. It's simple to say but the only way it's going to happen this decade is by open source momentum and the wider development community.”
IoT and content
There are also opportunities for broadcasters and content owners to capitalise on the IoT.
This ranges from crowd sourced weather forecasts to building information from the IoT into talent show formats to judge the emotional response to a contestant.

Some content owners may synchronize the overall viewing experience with the home, potentially controlling your lighting system in sync with a movie, TV show or live event,” suggests McKesey. “There may be unique merchandising opportunities where content owners sell branded IoT devices to enhance the watching experience.” For example, lighting for any kind of movie, vibrating seats for an action movie, a device that releases aromas for kids content.

Some content owners may also synchronize the overall experience with the home, potentially controlling your lighting system in synch with a movie, TV show or live event. There may be unique merchandising opportunities where content owners may sell branded IoT devices to enhance the watching experience (for example lighting for any kind of movie, vibrating seats for an action movie, a device that releases aromas for a kids movie, etc.)”

A toy Dalek in the living room could be activated to move in familiar Dalek fashion by an audio trigger embedded in an episode of Dr Who. The spookily realistic interaction was demonstrated by BBC Future Media in 2011 and suggests other possibilities where content could take on a literal third dimension.

Rovi observe that the opportunity to understand who is actually watching based on information from other IoT devices is also crucial to the advertising world. “While privacy considerations should remain at the top of the agenda, getting the right advertising content around our favourite shows offers a huge business opportunity,” says Dawes.

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