Internet Of Things To Make More Cities Smart: Gartner
Describing a smart city as an urban area where multiple sectors cooperate to achieve sustainable outcomes, Gartner said IoT would facilitate sharing real-time information specifically.
As majority of IoT spending for smart cities will come from the private sector, TSPs will benefit with shorter procurement cycles than the public sector.
As denizens invest more in smart-home solutions, the number of connected things in smart homes will cross one billion units in 2017.
Connected things include smart LED lighting, healthcare monitoring, smart locks and sensors for motion detection or carbon monoxide.
Smart LED lighting will record the highest growth of IoT consumer applications, with 570 million units expected to be sold by 2020 as against six million this year, as light will be a communication carrier than an illumination source.
"Homes will become information and smart-enabled, with an integrated services environment to provide value and create individual-driven ambience. They will become personal space that provides assistance or concierge experiences to an individual," Tratz-Ryan asserted.
Use of IoT in transport will reduce traffic congestion. The US and Britain are implementing radio receivers and sensors that are embedded on a highway to diagnose traffic conditions in real time.
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