As always with difficult questions like this, the answer is yes. Essentially, hardware is cool , but software provides the value.
As the internet of things has developed slowly over the past decade, we’ve seen huge amounts of cool hardware: tags, sensors, and internet-connected smart devices. Wiliot’s recently-unveiled Pixel2 bluetooth tag, which is essentially a postage-stamp-sized three-core ARM computer that doesn’t need a battery and has multiple sensors for everything from movement to fill levels to temperature to humidity to tamper detection, is at the top end of that scale: very cool hardware.
That’s great, but it’s not enough. It’s software that actually delivers value, and that’s why the company also recently introduced a no-code automation platform, which not only collects the data from potentially millions of smart devices in its supply chain, factory, or stores, but also makes it usable, digestible, and accessible in the enterprise platforms they use to manage their business.
Source: News Formal (newsformal.com)
This feels like somewhere between theranos and vaporware. How can any device capture stray radio waves, process them as energy, run them through a processor and put them out as BLE?
United States Latest News, United States Headlines
Similar News:You can also read news stories similar to this one that we have collected from other news sources.
Source: ForbesTech - 🏆 318. / 59 Read more »
Source: IntEngineering - 🏆 287. / 63 Read more »
Source: TheStarPhoenix - 🏆 253. / 63 Read more »
Source: CNBC - 🏆 12. / 72 Read more »
Source: ForbesTech - 🏆 318. / 59 Read more »