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Tech giants eye lead in Internet of Things

By Korea Herald

Published : June 9, 2014 - 20:35

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WASHINGTON (AFP) ― It’s not just smartphones and tablets anymore. The world’s tech giants are now battling over a wider array of connected devices, from refrigerators to cars to wristwatches.

Announcements in recent days from Apple and Samsung made clear they are staking their claim to the Internet of Things following Google’s announcement earlier this year that it was creating a new Android platform for wearable electronics.

“The Internet of Things is the next big platform,” said Roger Kay, an analyst with Endpoint Technologies Associates.

“These are potentially billions of devices. That’s a big market, so every consortium is lining up for that.”

A study released by research firm IDC said the market for the Internet of Things will grow from $1.9 trillion in 2013 to $7.1 trillion in 2020 as businesses and consumers adopt smart technology for homes, cars and a variety of accessories.
A Samsung employee demonstrates the new SM-R381 smartwatch at the Tizen Developer Conference in San Francisco last week. (AFP-Yonhap) A Samsung employee demonstrates the new SM-R381 smartwatch at the Tizen Developer Conference in San Francisco last week. (AFP-Yonhap)

Apple unveiled Monday its new mobile operating system iOS 8 along with HealthKit software to manage personal health care and HomeKit for home appliances, while encouraging developers to create services for the iOS operating system used in iPhones and iPads.

“Apple iOS 8 has the beginnings of a full-fledged platform supporting Internet of Things, you can see it with their health and fitness hooks and their ability to entertain more third party devices,” said Compass Intelligence chief mobile analyst Gerry Purdy.

But Apple is following its own path, aiming for tighter control and with less interoperability by limiting connections with non-Apple devices.

“It may be that Apple will just colonize a few areas and do it well,” said Kay.

Samsung, meanwhile, is jumping into the fray with Tizen, an open-source operating system that could take on iOS and Android for connected devices.

Frank Gillett at Forrester Research said Samsung ― by far the most successful maker of Android phones and tablets ― wants to distance itself from Google in the next phase of technology.

“I think Samsung is in a challenging and difficult place,” Gillett told AFP.

“They have been successful in building devices but they don’t have a software platform or a consumer relationship.”

Gillett said that with Tizen, Samsung is aiming for “a multi-part software and services strategy to build sticky relationships with customers to keep them buying hardware.”

Still, he said it was “an uphill battle” for Samsung, which is trying to establish a new platform to compete against Android, iOS and others ― including Microsoft’s Windows and BlackBerry’s QNX, which is widely used in automobile systems.

Richard Windsor of Edison Investment Research says Google has shown it can make money from this strategy of offering Android for free.

“Samsung has mistakenly assumed that it can maintain its 18 percent handset margins by focusing on hardware. Consequently, it has been willing to cede complete control of the ecosystem to Google,” he said in a research note.

“This has ensured that Google will grow nicely driven by mobile advertising revenues while we expect Samsung to experience declining earnings.”

But the Internet of Things will likely be big enough for several platforms and may not see the same platform wars as the PC or smartphone markets.

“I don’t put any platform out there in front,” Gillett said.

The analyst said that the market is unlikely to be a “duopoly,” and that there “is a whole other layer of complexity” to the market for the Internet of Things.

For now, some analysts see Google as best positioned to benefit from the new phase of the Internet.