Wireless Logic to exhibit and speak at Hardware Pioneers Max 2025
Wireless Logic will be speaking and exhibiting at Hardware Pioneers Max (23rd April, London). At the show, the team will be on hand to share insights into how embedded engineers and product designers can navigate the growing complexity of connectivity, regulation, and security to develop IoT devices that are truly built to last.
With IoT becoming central to operations across many industries, there’s growing pressure to design devices that are built to last. Today’s solutions must be secure, scalable, and resilient from the outset – capable of withstanding shifting regulatory environments, emerging cyber threats and fast-moving technical innovations. However, with a crowded and fragmented connectivity landscape adding layers of complexity, even the most experienced product teams are rethinking how they design devices that can truly go the distance.
“Resilient IoT devices aren’t built by chance – they’re the result of deliberate decisions made very early in the design process,” said Toby Gasston, Mobile Core Product Lead at Wireless Logic. “At the show, we’ll explore some of the most common challenges with IoT device manufacturing, including selecting the right connectivity solution, navigating unpredictable global regulations, and embedding security from day one."
On 23rd April at 10am, Gasston will deliver a seminar to expand on these themes. The session ‘Built to Last: Critical Considerations for Future-Ready IoT’ will provide real-world advice for engineers, integrators, and product teams looking to design IoT solutions that are built to perform, built to scale, and built to withstand whatever comes next. Key themes will include:
- Connectivity: why early technology choices matter, how to plan for network sunsets, and how to keep devices operational as infrastructure evolves
- Compliance: how to navigate tightening cross-border regulations, the importance of flexibility, and the impact of new standards like SGP.32 on scalability
- Security: how to embed resilience from the outset, evaluate threats and implement both design-phase and post-deployment measures to prevent downtime
“The choices made at the design stage have a lasting impact, and the best IoT devices are those developed with foresight. Rather than simply reacting to change, we need to start building with the expectation that change will come. This will separate short-term fixes from long-term solutions.”