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SECU-VISION provides the best optimized solution for your request.
2018/01/04
Technology is constantly evolving. More mature network infrastructure,
wider availability of data and increased processing power have all helped
advance technologies
such as deep learning and edge analytics to the next level.
So what’s new this year and what’s trending?
According to IHS, AI has matured to the point where it is being used as
a competitive differentiator in several industries.
It further points out optimization for on-device versus cloud-based solutions is
becoming an area of focus.
“Cloud AI has more computing power to analyze data as it utilizes deep learning
algorithms, but there are potential issues around privacy, latency and stability.
On-device AI, meanwhile, can help offset those dangers to some degree.
For instance, smartphone users who deploy the built-in AI of their phones are able to
store data locally and thus safeguard their privacy,” it said.
Citing its forecast that the global installed base of IoT devices will rise to 73 billion
in 2025,
that enhancements in IoT connectivity, such as low-power wireless access(LPWA), will drive growth.
It further said that adjacent technologies will become increasingly sophisticated.
“Machine video and ubiquitous video will empower new types of visual analytics.
And AI, the cloud and virtualization will help develop critical insights sourced
from data at the so-called ‘edge’ of computing networks,
The cloud services will pave the way for technologically immature companies
to utilize machine learning (ML) and AI, radically transforming their usage and
understanding of data.
While the first 5G commercial deployments have emerged,
the path to full 5G adoption and deployment is complicated,
with new opportunities and challenges alike in store for mobile network operators,
infrastructure providers, device manufacturers and end users,
“5G represents a dramatic expansion of traditional cellular technology use cases
beyond mobile voice and broadband, to include a multitude of IoT and
mission-critical applications.
The growing use of screens and cameras across multiple consumer- and enterprise-device categories,
along with increasingly advanced broadcast, fixed and mobile data networks, is
powering an explosion in video consumption, creation, distribution and data traffic.
It further points out video content is increasingly expanding beyond
entertainment into industrial applications for medical, education, security and
remote controls, as well as digital signage.
“The proliferation of image sensors, as well as improvements in image processing
and analysis,
are enabling a broad range of applications and use cases includingindustrial robots, drone applications, intelligent transportation systems, high-quality
surveillance, and medical and automotive,” the paper notes.
Drones and robots’ roles in manufacturing and other sectors have become
increasingly important.
Indoor drones, for example, can help with installation or monitoring in places
that’s hard to access for human.
The report confirms this notion.
“The deeper underpinnings of the story lie in the disruptive potential of robots and
drones to transform long-standing business models in manufacturing and industry,
impacting critical areas such as logistics, material picking and handling,
navigational autonomy and delivery
Finally, blockchain has emerged as a much-discussed technology
that can help with identity management, secure transactions and beyond.
“Blockchain-based services beyond financial services are already being developed
and deployed and will continue to ramp in 2018.
These include: the use of blockchain to improve advertising measurement and
combat ad fraud; blockchain-based systems for distributing music royalty payments;
and solutions to better track and manage electronics supply chains,”