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Internet of Things to grow to 26 billion units by 2020: Gartner

This excludes PCs, tablets, smartphones, representing an almost 30-fold incrase from 0.9 bn in 2009

K Rajani Kanth Hyderabad
IT research and advisory company, Gartner Inc, today said that the Internet of Things (IoT), which excludes PCs, tablets and smartphones, would grow to 26 billion units installed in 2020, representing an almost 30-fold increase from 0.9 billion in 2009.
 
The IoT product and service suppliers will generate incremental revenue exceeding $300 billion, mostly in services, in 2020. It will result in $1.9 trillion in global economic value-add through sales into diverse end markets, it said in a press release.
 
The IoT is the network of physical objects that contain embedded technology to communicate and sense or interact with their internal states or the external environment. The IoT encompasses hardware (the things themselves), embedded software, communications services and information services associated with the things. 
 
 
Gartner refers to the companies that provide the hardware, software and services as IoT suppliers. The incremental IoT supplier revenue contribution from IoT in 2020 is estimated at $309 billion.
 
“The growth in IoT will far exceed that of other connected devices. By 2020, the number of smartphones tablets and PCs in use will reach about 7.3 billion units. In contrast, the IoT will have expanded at a much faster rate, resulting in a population of about 26 billion units at that time,” said Peter Middleton, research director at Gartner.
 
Gartner expects that given the low-cost of adding LoT capability to consumer products, ghost devices (a combination of products that have the capability built-in but require software to activate' it and products with IoT functionality that customers do not actively leverage) with unused connectivity will be common.
 
In addition, it said, enterprises would make extensive use of IoT technology, and there would be a wide range of products sold into various markets, such as advanced medical devices, factory automation sensors and applications in industrial robotics, sensor motes for increased agricultural yield, and automotive sensors and infrastructure integrity monitoring systems for diverse areas such as road and railway transportation, water distribution and electrical transmission.
 
“By 2020, component costs will have come down to the point that connectivity will become a standard feature, even for processors costing less than $1. This opens up the possibility of connecting just about anything, from the very simple to the very complex, to offer remote control, monitoring and sensing,” Middleton said. 
 
“The fact is that, today, many categories of connected things in 2020 don’t yet exist. As product designers dream up ways to exploit the inherent connectivity that will be offered in intelligent products, we expect the variety of devices offered to explode,” he added. 
 

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First Published: Dec 12 2013 | 4:40 PM IST

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