Analysis

Predictions for next year's electronics industry

24th November 2016
Alice Matthews
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As 2016 draws to a close, embedded systems consultancy ByteSnap Design share their predictions for what may dominate the electronics industry in 2017.

GPRS designs phased out in favour of LTE 
For decades GPRS has been the go-to communications choice for low cost, low bandwidth long-distance comms. However, with GPRS shutdown now on the horizon in many territories, it makes sense for future product designs to use an alternative communications technology.

Cat M is a narrowband category of LTE (Long Term Evolution) which is split between two releases - Cat M1 and M2. M1 is aimed at higher bandwidth applications such as HD video streaming and security apps, while M2 chipsets have been designed to support low-power IoT applications including asset trackers and industrial sensors. Its proponents say this protocol is right at the top of the IoT tree – citing a host of benefits such as:

  • Cost-effective connectivity
  • High node density
  • Reliable, secure communications
  • Flexible integration options

Until the Cat M2 network infrastructure is rolled out, designers will need to consider carefully product field life, power consumption and unit cost to decide whether to use GPRS or a higher bandwidth modem.

Home automation to gain further traction
With the release of Amazon Echo, Apple HomeKit, Google Home - all pushing for smart home - we think it’s safe to say that more and more smart devices (IoT) will be hitting the market in the next year or two.

With a large variety of standards fighting for their place in the IoT market, the battle for supremacy is set to continue throughout next year and almost certainly beyond. As with VHS vs Betamax, it will probably be the size of the supporting organisations that determines who the victors are.

Industrial equipment monitoring
We predict that the industrial sector will make a push towards the connected monitoring of equipment.

Predictive maintenance will be a big driver in industrial automation for 2017. More new products will support remote management and status reporting while existing products will have these features retro-fitted to them. The benefits of being able to more easily find and fix potential issues and diagnose problems when something does go wrong means we anticipate significant growth in the area during 2017.

Glut of new AI, AR and VR goodies
Standby for a skyrocketing of activity, opportunities and new releases in the AI, AR and VR sectors next year.

There’s a stampede of industry big hitters – including Amazon, Apple, Facebook, Google, Intel, LG, Microsoft, Qualcomm, Samsung and Sony – all vying for the biggest slice of the AI, AR and VR market.

The – currently - unassailable success of Pokémon Go is proof, if any were needed, that AR and VR is no longer niche, but firmly in the mainstream.

The revenue forecast from sensors built for the Augmented Reality (AR), Virtual Reality (VR), and Artificial Intelligence (AI) markets globally, is expected to reach $97bn in 2017. We look forward to discovering more Artificial Intelligence, Augmented Reality and Virtual Reality-based products next year.

Thread reaches maturity
The Thread alliance is no longer the new boy in town that it was, and in 2017 we are expecting to see new design wins using Thread in place of ZigBee or other IoT standards, as the chip vendors’ stacks become stable.

Continuation of the mega-mergers?
Who would have predicted that the recently shaken-up NXP would so quickly be undergoing yet another change only a year after the Freescale merger? Surely 2017 can’t have any more surprising mergers and acquisitions… can it?

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