wireless value realization
Gartner uses the term “wireless value realization” to describe the range of ways in which next-generation wireless technologies will soon deliver new and improved services and reduce capital costs.
With disparate wireless technologies (and often whole solutions) working together on a single infrastructure, the benefits will include:
A wide range of new contexts, such as location, energy harvesting/battery free operations and sensing
Improved developer experience and productivity through self-service capabilities with automated infrastructure operations
Unified network connectivity and security, providing a migration path for operational technology (OT), information technology (IT) and line of business (LoB) operations
A more cost-efficient, reliable and scalable technical foundation that reduces capital expenditure
The future of wireless
Wireless value realization is an emerging trend that expands the use cases that leverage the ongoing advancements in wireless capabilities — in areas from bandwidth and range to power consumption.
Wireless technology is evolving in two key directions. First, the basic communication capabilities of wireless continue to improve, which means that they can enable a much wider range of tasks than in the past. Second, wireless is moving beyond simple connectivity to add capabilities that serve as a foundation for digital innovation in such areas as:
Location tracking. Most mainstream wireless technologies have the ability to sense the location of connected endpoints.
Radar sensing. Many wireless networking systems can be deployed with services similar to radar, where location is determined with an endpoint that is communicating to the network.
Value added services. Technologies, including Wi-Fi and cellular, are gaining a range of value-added services such as vehicle-to-vehicle communications, broadcast, multicast and media-specific features, enabling new wireless use cases.
Ubiquity is improving. Especially when driven by cellular rollouts and the emerging constellations of low earth orbit (LEO) satellites bringing internet and IoT connectivity to unconnected regions.
Ultra-low-power wireless systems. Using wireless energy harvesting means that battery-free operation is now possible using protocols such as Bluetooth and NFC. This will enable new types of tagging and tracking.
These areas of innovation mean that wireless is moving from a communications technology to become a broader digital innovation platform. Technology executives must plan for a future of greater wireless usage, protocols and capabilities utilized to support digital business.
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