LPWAN news: RPMA gets module partner, Senet’s LoRa adds security
Industrial IoT 5G (RCR) – September 8, 2016 – Ingenu, a low-power wide-area network provider, and u‑blox, a company that specializes in wireless and positioning of modules and chips, today announced a partnership that will enable the “next generation” of Ingenu’s Random Phase Multiple Access technology to serve global opportunities in the “internet of things” market. Read more>>



Rethink Internet of Things – September 8, 2016 – Ingenu has announced a module manufacturing deal with u-blox, a familiar name in IoT-focused wireless radios, which will see u-blox sell modules compatible with Ingenu’s RPMA LPWAN technology. In addition, the company announced a reselling deal with Podsystem, in what is said to be the first of a number of deals that look to expand Ingenu’s sales channels.
EDN Europe – September 8, 2016 – Ingenu is a US-based provider of machine-machine and IoT connectivity technologies; it has announced a partnership with Swiss module maker u-blox to develop and manufacture devices according to Ingenu’s RPMA principles.
IoT Business News – September 7, 2016 – Leading supplier of communications and positioning products announces significant roadmap investment in RPMA technology.
FierceWireless – September 7, 2016 – As AT&T and other cellular players work to expand their IoT businesses, they’re increasingly facing challenge from the likes of Sigfox, Senet, Ingenu and others that operate non-cellular wireless networks, generally in unlicensed spectrum. But AT&T’s Cameron Coursey argued that cellular network operators will likely dominate the space in the years to come. 

Mobile World Live – September 7, 2016 – LIVE FROM CTIA SUPER MOBILITY WEEK, LAS VEGAS: John Horn, CEO of Ingenu Networks, said the technology battles taking place in the fast-growing low power Internet of Things (IoT) market will see just two major winners: his own RPMA technology and the favoured (but as yet unavailable) tech choice of most cellular players, NB-IoT.
PC World & CIO – September 6, 2016 – To get small, low-power IoT devices online, it’s no longer necessary to saddle them with full-scale cellular radios. Independent players like