How New Long-Range Radios Will Change the Internet of Things
Medium – October 28, 2015 – Radios drain batteries. By definition, in fact, radios radiate energy into space. The more energy they use to transmit, the further their signal will travel. So device developers have traditionally faced a tradeoff between range and battery life. You can build a Bluetooth sensor that lasts for years on a battery, but it you’ll get only 30 feet of range. Or you can build a cellular sensor with fantastic range, but you’ll need to recharge it every week. Read More>>


Fierce Wireless – September 29, 2015 – I’ve been thinking a lot about Mobile World Congress 2016 lately. In part, I’m just mentally preparing for a ski trip in Gstaad the week prior, the first time I’ve been skiing in forever (note: If you see me hobbling around La Fira in a cast, don’t ask). But there are also a handful of other reasons. CTIA’s Super Mobility Week just finished up earlier this month; while not approaching the stature of Mobile World Congress (MWC), it’s still one of the largest mobile-focused trade shows, providing insights into what we might see in Barcelona. Just prior to Super Mobility Week, we completed our first Mobile World Congress planning session with a customer. And since that was a cue to book my flight home from MWC, I soon realized that all the window seats are taken on any flight I’m likely to take. First world problems — I know.
Industrial Equipment News – September 28, 2015 – Hey! Will All this IoT Stuff Mess Up Our LTE? Probably not, actually.
IoT Journal – Sep 28, 2015 –
CIO Magazine – September 21, 2015 – The international body in charge of LTE will standardize a version of that technology specifically for the Internet of Things, taking on rival systems for connecting low-power equipment like parking meters and industrial sensors.
EDN – September 15, 2015 – Wireless network technologies such as WiFi, ZigBee, and Bluetooth are fine for consumer applications of the Internet of Things (IoT), but many civic, industrial, and other IoT applications need to operate over vastly greater territory than these technologies can handle. Cellular and satellite machine-to-machine (M2M) technologies have traditionally filled the gap, but cost, power, and scalability concerns make these choices less appealing for the future. A number of low-power, wide-area networking (LP-WAN) alternatives have arisen that need careful consideration by developers looking to address these wide-ranging IoT applications.
Telecompaper – September 15, 2015 – Public M2M network provider Ingenu, formerly known as On-Ramp Wireless, has joined forces with Italian smart metering company
Rethink Research – September 11, 2015 – On-Ramp Wireless, a LPWAN provider, has decided to rebrand and become Ingenu. The company is using the opportunity to launch its Machine Network – a public network based on its Random Phase Multiple Access (RPMA) technology, and converting some of its 35 currently private installations to help support the initiative.