This document discusses the vision of connected things and megacities at Ericsson Research. It notes that the number of connected devices is expected to grow exponentially to 50 billion by 2020, creating both challenges and opportunities from the massive amount of data. Ericsson aims to address this through horizontal service enablement and innovation in specific verticals like transportation, retail, and smart cities. The document promotes Ericsson Labs, which supports developers and provides APIs to enable applications for connected things.
Embarq india talking transit - support infrastructure for public transport ...Divya Kottadiel
This document summarizes a workshop on public transport terminals and support facilities. The workshop discussed how a successful urban transport system provides low travel times and costs, equal access to opportunities, and limited environmental impact. As urban populations and vehicle ownership increases, there is a huge challenge to build infrastructure. Alternatives discussed include capital intensive highway and rail solutions versus prioritizing non-motorized transport and bus systems. Public transport solutions that focus on pedestrians, bicycles and high quality bus networks can provide sustainable transport while limiting automobile dependence and its negative impacts on road safety, urban sprawl, and the environment. The workshop covered best practices for support infrastructure like depots, stops, and terminals to effectively implement public transport systems.
Stephen minton tech transformation in the age of uncertainty - seserv se wo...ictseserv
This document discusses technology trends and the state of the IT industry from 2011-2020. It predicts that by 2020, 80% of the $5 trillion IT industry's growth will be driven by third platform technologies like cloud, mobile, social and big data. These technologies will power new solutions and see expanding consumption globally. The battles to lead the growing ICT marketplace of 2020 will be determined between 2012-2014. European IT markets are slowing due to economic issues but internet and mobile device penetration continues to grow worldwide, especially in emerging markets. The rise of cloud, mobile and the "Internet of Things" will transform the industry and drive architectural changes over this period.
This document summarizes a webinar about optimizing emails for mobile devices. It discusses trends showing the rise of mobile email and importance of optimization. Tips included using single column layouts, inline styles over style sheets, and testing links and images across different devices. Speakers emphasized the need to design for a small screen and avoid wasting users' time. Rendering tools and testing emails on multiple platforms before sending were presented as important for ensuring proper display.
1) E-commerce in India has significant potential for growth given India's large population that is becoming more affluent with rapid GDP growth and expansion of internet access.
2) While the current Indian e-commerce market size is only $10 billion compared to $500 billion in the US, with continued high growth rates of around 47% annually, the market could reach $100 billion in size within 6 years.
3) Major challenges to growth include low internet penetration and credit card usage currently, but increasing digital literacy and usage among younger demographic groups signals critical mass for the industry.
Smarter planet and smarter city kth indek eng 120925Andreas Lundgren
The document discusses how instrumented, interconnected, and intelligent systems can help cities optimize outcomes through insights gained from analyzing data patterns and managing information. It provides examples of how predictive analytics have helped reduce crime rates, streamline transportation systems, and transform social services. The overall message is that smarter cities can increase prosperity by using data to make better decisions, anticipate problems, and coordinate resources effectively.
Managing ONLY devices is BYOD Policy FAILURE Apperian
Are you aware of the liabilities of managing your employees' personally owned devices?
Are you investing in the technology you really need?
Are you confident in the security of your device management?
If you're unsure of the answers, view this eye-opening webinar with Alan Murray, Senior Vice President of Product at Apperian, as he addresses how and why app-level management is the answer for BYOD.
The document discusses predictions for technological changes between 2012-2030 and their effects on society. It predicts that by 2030, cities will be highly intelligent with connectivity and sensing capabilities embedded everywhere. This will fundamentally change how people live and work. To realize this vision, foundational technologies need to be developed now in areas like smart manufacturing, energy efficiency, transportation, healthcare and more. Exponential data growth is also expected, driven by more connected devices predicted to reach over 60 billion by 2030. Societal changes from these technological advances include new models for education, government services and social inclusion.
Accessibility digital by default presentation for digital futures 2012Alison Smith
What does digital default mean in terms of digital access for disabled and deaf people? Only 41% are online. This presentation highlights many of the issues and offers some solutions.
Embarq india talking transit - support infrastructure for public transport ...Divya Kottadiel
This document summarizes a workshop on public transport terminals and support facilities. The workshop discussed how a successful urban transport system provides low travel times and costs, equal access to opportunities, and limited environmental impact. As urban populations and vehicle ownership increases, there is a huge challenge to build infrastructure. Alternatives discussed include capital intensive highway and rail solutions versus prioritizing non-motorized transport and bus systems. Public transport solutions that focus on pedestrians, bicycles and high quality bus networks can provide sustainable transport while limiting automobile dependence and its negative impacts on road safety, urban sprawl, and the environment. The workshop covered best practices for support infrastructure like depots, stops, and terminals to effectively implement public transport systems.
Stephen minton tech transformation in the age of uncertainty - seserv se wo...ictseserv
This document discusses technology trends and the state of the IT industry from 2011-2020. It predicts that by 2020, 80% of the $5 trillion IT industry's growth will be driven by third platform technologies like cloud, mobile, social and big data. These technologies will power new solutions and see expanding consumption globally. The battles to lead the growing ICT marketplace of 2020 will be determined between 2012-2014. European IT markets are slowing due to economic issues but internet and mobile device penetration continues to grow worldwide, especially in emerging markets. The rise of cloud, mobile and the "Internet of Things" will transform the industry and drive architectural changes over this period.
This document summarizes a webinar about optimizing emails for mobile devices. It discusses trends showing the rise of mobile email and importance of optimization. Tips included using single column layouts, inline styles over style sheets, and testing links and images across different devices. Speakers emphasized the need to design for a small screen and avoid wasting users' time. Rendering tools and testing emails on multiple platforms before sending were presented as important for ensuring proper display.
1) E-commerce in India has significant potential for growth given India's large population that is becoming more affluent with rapid GDP growth and expansion of internet access.
2) While the current Indian e-commerce market size is only $10 billion compared to $500 billion in the US, with continued high growth rates of around 47% annually, the market could reach $100 billion in size within 6 years.
3) Major challenges to growth include low internet penetration and credit card usage currently, but increasing digital literacy and usage among younger demographic groups signals critical mass for the industry.
Smarter planet and smarter city kth indek eng 120925Andreas Lundgren
The document discusses how instrumented, interconnected, and intelligent systems can help cities optimize outcomes through insights gained from analyzing data patterns and managing information. It provides examples of how predictive analytics have helped reduce crime rates, streamline transportation systems, and transform social services. The overall message is that smarter cities can increase prosperity by using data to make better decisions, anticipate problems, and coordinate resources effectively.
Managing ONLY devices is BYOD Policy FAILURE Apperian
Are you aware of the liabilities of managing your employees' personally owned devices?
Are you investing in the technology you really need?
Are you confident in the security of your device management?
If you're unsure of the answers, view this eye-opening webinar with Alan Murray, Senior Vice President of Product at Apperian, as he addresses how and why app-level management is the answer for BYOD.
The document discusses predictions for technological changes between 2012-2030 and their effects on society. It predicts that by 2030, cities will be highly intelligent with connectivity and sensing capabilities embedded everywhere. This will fundamentally change how people live and work. To realize this vision, foundational technologies need to be developed now in areas like smart manufacturing, energy efficiency, transportation, healthcare and more. Exponential data growth is also expected, driven by more connected devices predicted to reach over 60 billion by 2030. Societal changes from these technological advances include new models for education, government services and social inclusion.
Accessibility digital by default presentation for digital futures 2012Alison Smith
What does digital default mean in terms of digital access for disabled and deaf people? Only 41% are online. This presentation highlights many of the issues and offers some solutions.
1) Several Asian satellite operators see partnerships through shared satellites (condosats) as key to expanding business and gaining efficiencies, as consolidation is difficult due to national politics.
2) Cooperation through condosats is becoming more mainstream, with recent sharing deals between operators like Asia Broadcast Satellite, Satmex, Measat, IPstar, and AsiaSat.
3) Both increased connectivity and cooperation among operators through condosats bring opportunities for growth but also new challenges and risks around data security, infrastructure resilience, and control of personal data that governments and companies must address.
The document discusses virtual worlds and organizations' activities in virtual worlds like Second Life. It summarizes what companies are doing in Second Life (marketing, branding, sales, recruiting), challenges (lack of return on investment and critical mass), and potential future scenarios for virtual worlds in 2012. It considers whether virtual worlds will become more widely used and integrated with real world or remain limited and fragmented.
Mobile is becoming an increasingly important platform in India. Over 800 million phones are in use, with over 60 million mobile internet users. As data costs decrease and speeds increase, mobile internet and searches are expected to surpass PC usage by 2012. Smartphone shipments are rising rapidly and iOS and Android data usage will exceed all other mobile devices. Mobile penetration is much higher than other media like TV and internet. Mobile consumption is shifting to apps, mobile internet, messaging, and voice. Video and rich media ads on mobile are more engaging and memorable than other digital ad formats and generate higher purchase intent and interactions from users.
Instagram imagery captures the broad range of personas people use music to broadcast their lifestyles to the world. We use our photos on Instagram to showcase this diversity of personalities. Instagram allows people to express themselves and their identities through curating their profiles and sharing their lives.
The document summarizes discussions from the 2011 Global Mobile Internet Conference in Beijing. It finds that:
1) The rise of mobile apps and location-based services on smartphones is driving growth in mobile services, especially for marketing, search and commerce.
2) China's mobile internet development is hard to predict due to unique demographics, needs and devices, but feature phones will remain important and growth in users and services is strong.
3) Western companies must adapt to China's complex mobile ecosystem to succeed.
My talk at Mobile Social Networking Asia, HK which was organised by NeoEdge. India mobile volume, many believe, can potentially create in a couple of years, same size of market as Japan.
How Collaboration Can Change the WorldAyelet Baron
The document discusses how connectivity and technology are changing the world. It notes that in the past, people were not connected, but now everything is connected. It highlights how technologies like smartphones and social media have spread widely in just a few years. The document then discusses how social media has empowered consumers and shifted power away from traditional media. It provides examples of how mobile technology is transforming areas like healthcare in developing regions. The remainder of the document appears to discuss a program called COVIT that is using technology like telepresence to connect and empower youth.
This document provides an overview of a roadshow event organized by Great Wall Club to promote their Global Mobile Internet Conference (GMIC) in the United States. A Chinese delegation of technology company CEOs and executives visited several major tech companies and participated in industry events from November 5-11, 2011. The itinerary included visits to companies such as Google, Square, and Sequoia Capital, as well as dinners with venture capitalists and startup founders. The document also summarizes trends in the mobile market moving from horizontal to vertical-specific solutions and the rise of social, local and mobile applications.
The document discusses three driving forces accelerating the digitization phenomenon: consumer demand for constant connectivity, the continued development and deployment of digital technologies, and recognition of the substantial economic benefits of digitization. It notes that digitization is reaching an inflection point due to the combined effects of these forces, requiring CEOs to invest in developing necessary digital capabilities or risk falling behind more proactive competitors.
Accenture Mobility MWC 2012 - Bubble over barcelona - lars kampLars Kamp
A perspective on the major trends shaping mobility in the coming decade. A video of the talk is on YouTube:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=plbFgus5puY&feature=youtu.be
The document discusses the current and potential future uses of virtual worlds like Second Life by organizations. Currently, many large companies use virtual worlds for marketing, branding, sales, recruiting, training and education. However, return on investment is still limited. The document outlines four possible scenarios for how virtual worlds may be used and integrated by 2012, and suggests organizations experiment with virtual worlds to learn and stay aware of emerging opportunities while considering their potential disruptive nature.
Mobile usage has shifted dramatically from legacy devices to smartphones. While messaging remains popular, mobile internet and smartphone apps now command significant consumer attention. Social networking further increases a brand's consumer reach, as mobile users are highly social and influential. Effective mobile marketing requires an ongoing, multi-channel communication strategy adapted to the mobile platform and how consumers are using their devices.
Instagram imagery captures a broad range of personas through photos. Smartphones, led by iPhones and Androids, drive increased data usage including for social media, apps, and location-based services. Popular apps on both platforms include Facebook, Maps, YouTube, and Pandora. Instagram photos portray music and lifestyle to broadcast personality to the world.
This document discusses the growth of mobile internet and apps. It notes that mobile phones now have over 4 billion subscribers globally, surpassing other media platforms in reach. Content revenues for mobile are decreasing as users spend more time on communication and entertainment like video clips and games rather than purchasing content. Apps have become very popular with over 125,000 available for iPhone and 3,000 downloaded per minute globally. While apps are free to inexpensive, developing a successful mobile app can cost companies $20,000-$100,000 on average. The mobile internet experience has evolved from short browsing sessions to regularly being used for 10-15 minutes or more. Social networking, messaging and mobile internet are becoming more important ways for consumers to engage with brands and
Accenture Mobility - Trends for the Next DecadeLars Kamp
From a deck that I presented at the SIIA “All About Mobile” conference in November 2011 in San Francisco. It starts with the usual set of slides on the recent history of mobility (and I will keep presenting them until I see no more “I had no clue” faces in an audience), and then goes deeper into Moore’s Law and how we see it continuing for cell phones.
An additional journey back in history to the early days of the industrialization and electricity. Companies had to generate their own power (by using wind, water, animals, etc.) and Burden’s Wheel is a good example of one big, giant monolithic effort to do so. Along came Tesla and Westinghouse, and the first power plant “Adam’s Plant” was able to provide about 3x the power, but over a much further distance, and to multiple customers. The concept of an electric utility was born, and what we saw happening was the fall of “enterprise power generation”.
Fast forward to 1969, and Douglas Parkhill and John McCarthy came up with the concept of the “Computer Utility”. Today we see multi-$B investments into public cloud infrastructures. In very simple terms, if history in the utility industry is any indicator, we will see enterprise clouds disappear. And as cloud infrastructures scale and get more efficient, and the price of computing goes down (Moore’s Law), developers will find a way to use and instrument that computing power, and make it consumable to enterprises and consumers, which gets us to Jevons’ Paradox.
Jevons observed how consumption of energy in England went up as coal power plants got more efficient. All the way to today where we keep the lights on in our homes 24/7, and darkness has actually become a scarce good in some metropolitan areas. Switching to enterprise computing and looking at BEA data on IT assets for the past four decades, we see that prices for IT assets are falling, whereas other assets follow an inflationary path. And as computing gets cheaper, enterprises consume more and more of it (and you can argue so do consumers, aka “Consumerization of IT”).
What is striking that with the arrival of the public Internet in ‘90-95 and web companies like Yahoo and Amazon, the mix in consumption is shifting: it’s increasingly going towards software, up from a SW:HW ratio of roughly 1:1 over three decades, to now 3:1. So today, for every $1 spent on hardware, enterprises spend $3 on software. Hence, it seems like enterprises are making use of the public cloud, which would explain the rise of SaaS companies, such Salesforce, SuccessFactors and also Amazon’s AWS.
And as the rise of smartphones is only beginning, enterprise mobility will likely drive the trend of an increasing SW:HW ratio further up. I wouldn’t be surprised to see the mix go to 10:1 in the next five years as smartphones proliferate and the amount of on-deck and off-deck computing power available to a single device is growing exponentially, the concept of “accelerated acceleratio
The document discusses the rise of online video and social media. It notes that online video viewing has increased dramatically, with over 800 billion views delivered by one video distribution network. It also discusses how social media has changed content discovery and distribution, with content now spreading virally from one-to-many across social networks rather than through traditional one-to-one or one-to-many broadcast models. The document suggests that these trends are transforming businesses and industries as companies look to own their media distribution and tell stories through digital content and social engagement.
This document discusses trends in web2.0 from March 2008. It covers the growth of personalization on the web through tools like widgets and RSS. It also discusses the rise of social networks and how they are changing how people interact and share information online. Finally, it discusses how Korea can foster more innovation in web2.0 through an open ecosystem approach.
This document provides an overview of social media marketing. It discusses key concepts like user-generated content, social bookmarking, and social media optimization. It highlights important social media platforms and trends, noting that people are increasingly using these channels. The document emphasizes that social media focuses on enabling and publishing conversations. It provides tips for social media marketing, such as being personal, seeing criticism as an opportunity, and contributing in a meaningful way.
This document provides an overview of Jean-François Bélisle's background and expertise in web analytics and customer analysis. It introduces Bélisle as the Director of Consulting Services at K3 Media with degrees in economics, marketing, and PhD studies in marketing and computational statistics. The document then outlines the agenda for a presentation on web analytics, including introductions to analytics, key terms, KPIs, and other analytical methods.
1) Several Asian satellite operators see partnerships through shared satellites (condosats) as key to expanding business and gaining efficiencies, as consolidation is difficult due to national politics.
2) Cooperation through condosats is becoming more mainstream, with recent sharing deals between operators like Asia Broadcast Satellite, Satmex, Measat, IPstar, and AsiaSat.
3) Both increased connectivity and cooperation among operators through condosats bring opportunities for growth but also new challenges and risks around data security, infrastructure resilience, and control of personal data that governments and companies must address.
The document discusses virtual worlds and organizations' activities in virtual worlds like Second Life. It summarizes what companies are doing in Second Life (marketing, branding, sales, recruiting), challenges (lack of return on investment and critical mass), and potential future scenarios for virtual worlds in 2012. It considers whether virtual worlds will become more widely used and integrated with real world or remain limited and fragmented.
Mobile is becoming an increasingly important platform in India. Over 800 million phones are in use, with over 60 million mobile internet users. As data costs decrease and speeds increase, mobile internet and searches are expected to surpass PC usage by 2012. Smartphone shipments are rising rapidly and iOS and Android data usage will exceed all other mobile devices. Mobile penetration is much higher than other media like TV and internet. Mobile consumption is shifting to apps, mobile internet, messaging, and voice. Video and rich media ads on mobile are more engaging and memorable than other digital ad formats and generate higher purchase intent and interactions from users.
Instagram imagery captures the broad range of personas people use music to broadcast their lifestyles to the world. We use our photos on Instagram to showcase this diversity of personalities. Instagram allows people to express themselves and their identities through curating their profiles and sharing their lives.
The document summarizes discussions from the 2011 Global Mobile Internet Conference in Beijing. It finds that:
1) The rise of mobile apps and location-based services on smartphones is driving growth in mobile services, especially for marketing, search and commerce.
2) China's mobile internet development is hard to predict due to unique demographics, needs and devices, but feature phones will remain important and growth in users and services is strong.
3) Western companies must adapt to China's complex mobile ecosystem to succeed.
My talk at Mobile Social Networking Asia, HK which was organised by NeoEdge. India mobile volume, many believe, can potentially create in a couple of years, same size of market as Japan.
How Collaboration Can Change the WorldAyelet Baron
The document discusses how connectivity and technology are changing the world. It notes that in the past, people were not connected, but now everything is connected. It highlights how technologies like smartphones and social media have spread widely in just a few years. The document then discusses how social media has empowered consumers and shifted power away from traditional media. It provides examples of how mobile technology is transforming areas like healthcare in developing regions. The remainder of the document appears to discuss a program called COVIT that is using technology like telepresence to connect and empower youth.
This document provides an overview of a roadshow event organized by Great Wall Club to promote their Global Mobile Internet Conference (GMIC) in the United States. A Chinese delegation of technology company CEOs and executives visited several major tech companies and participated in industry events from November 5-11, 2011. The itinerary included visits to companies such as Google, Square, and Sequoia Capital, as well as dinners with venture capitalists and startup founders. The document also summarizes trends in the mobile market moving from horizontal to vertical-specific solutions and the rise of social, local and mobile applications.
The document discusses three driving forces accelerating the digitization phenomenon: consumer demand for constant connectivity, the continued development and deployment of digital technologies, and recognition of the substantial economic benefits of digitization. It notes that digitization is reaching an inflection point due to the combined effects of these forces, requiring CEOs to invest in developing necessary digital capabilities or risk falling behind more proactive competitors.
Accenture Mobility MWC 2012 - Bubble over barcelona - lars kampLars Kamp
A perspective on the major trends shaping mobility in the coming decade. A video of the talk is on YouTube:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=plbFgus5puY&feature=youtu.be
The document discusses the current and potential future uses of virtual worlds like Second Life by organizations. Currently, many large companies use virtual worlds for marketing, branding, sales, recruiting, training and education. However, return on investment is still limited. The document outlines four possible scenarios for how virtual worlds may be used and integrated by 2012, and suggests organizations experiment with virtual worlds to learn and stay aware of emerging opportunities while considering their potential disruptive nature.
Mobile usage has shifted dramatically from legacy devices to smartphones. While messaging remains popular, mobile internet and smartphone apps now command significant consumer attention. Social networking further increases a brand's consumer reach, as mobile users are highly social and influential. Effective mobile marketing requires an ongoing, multi-channel communication strategy adapted to the mobile platform and how consumers are using their devices.
Instagram imagery captures a broad range of personas through photos. Smartphones, led by iPhones and Androids, drive increased data usage including for social media, apps, and location-based services. Popular apps on both platforms include Facebook, Maps, YouTube, and Pandora. Instagram photos portray music and lifestyle to broadcast personality to the world.
This document discusses the growth of mobile internet and apps. It notes that mobile phones now have over 4 billion subscribers globally, surpassing other media platforms in reach. Content revenues for mobile are decreasing as users spend more time on communication and entertainment like video clips and games rather than purchasing content. Apps have become very popular with over 125,000 available for iPhone and 3,000 downloaded per minute globally. While apps are free to inexpensive, developing a successful mobile app can cost companies $20,000-$100,000 on average. The mobile internet experience has evolved from short browsing sessions to regularly being used for 10-15 minutes or more. Social networking, messaging and mobile internet are becoming more important ways for consumers to engage with brands and
Accenture Mobility - Trends for the Next DecadeLars Kamp
From a deck that I presented at the SIIA “All About Mobile” conference in November 2011 in San Francisco. It starts with the usual set of slides on the recent history of mobility (and I will keep presenting them until I see no more “I had no clue” faces in an audience), and then goes deeper into Moore’s Law and how we see it continuing for cell phones.
An additional journey back in history to the early days of the industrialization and electricity. Companies had to generate their own power (by using wind, water, animals, etc.) and Burden’s Wheel is a good example of one big, giant monolithic effort to do so. Along came Tesla and Westinghouse, and the first power plant “Adam’s Plant” was able to provide about 3x the power, but over a much further distance, and to multiple customers. The concept of an electric utility was born, and what we saw happening was the fall of “enterprise power generation”.
Fast forward to 1969, and Douglas Parkhill and John McCarthy came up with the concept of the “Computer Utility”. Today we see multi-$B investments into public cloud infrastructures. In very simple terms, if history in the utility industry is any indicator, we will see enterprise clouds disappear. And as cloud infrastructures scale and get more efficient, and the price of computing goes down (Moore’s Law), developers will find a way to use and instrument that computing power, and make it consumable to enterprises and consumers, which gets us to Jevons’ Paradox.
Jevons observed how consumption of energy in England went up as coal power plants got more efficient. All the way to today where we keep the lights on in our homes 24/7, and darkness has actually become a scarce good in some metropolitan areas. Switching to enterprise computing and looking at BEA data on IT assets for the past four decades, we see that prices for IT assets are falling, whereas other assets follow an inflationary path. And as computing gets cheaper, enterprises consume more and more of it (and you can argue so do consumers, aka “Consumerization of IT”).
What is striking that with the arrival of the public Internet in ‘90-95 and web companies like Yahoo and Amazon, the mix in consumption is shifting: it’s increasingly going towards software, up from a SW:HW ratio of roughly 1:1 over three decades, to now 3:1. So today, for every $1 spent on hardware, enterprises spend $3 on software. Hence, it seems like enterprises are making use of the public cloud, which would explain the rise of SaaS companies, such Salesforce, SuccessFactors and also Amazon’s AWS.
And as the rise of smartphones is only beginning, enterprise mobility will likely drive the trend of an increasing SW:HW ratio further up. I wouldn’t be surprised to see the mix go to 10:1 in the next five years as smartphones proliferate and the amount of on-deck and off-deck computing power available to a single device is growing exponentially, the concept of “accelerated acceleratio
The document discusses the rise of online video and social media. It notes that online video viewing has increased dramatically, with over 800 billion views delivered by one video distribution network. It also discusses how social media has changed content discovery and distribution, with content now spreading virally from one-to-many across social networks rather than through traditional one-to-one or one-to-many broadcast models. The document suggests that these trends are transforming businesses and industries as companies look to own their media distribution and tell stories through digital content and social engagement.
This document discusses trends in web2.0 from March 2008. It covers the growth of personalization on the web through tools like widgets and RSS. It also discusses the rise of social networks and how they are changing how people interact and share information online. Finally, it discusses how Korea can foster more innovation in web2.0 through an open ecosystem approach.
This document provides an overview of social media marketing. It discusses key concepts like user-generated content, social bookmarking, and social media optimization. It highlights important social media platforms and trends, noting that people are increasingly using these channels. The document emphasizes that social media focuses on enabling and publishing conversations. It provides tips for social media marketing, such as being personal, seeing criticism as an opportunity, and contributing in a meaningful way.
This document provides an overview of Jean-François Bélisle's background and expertise in web analytics and customer analysis. It introduces Bélisle as the Director of Consulting Services at K3 Media with degrees in economics, marketing, and PhD studies in marketing and computational statistics. The document then outlines the agenda for a presentation on web analytics, including introductions to analytics, key terms, KPIs, and other analytical methods.
1. Building a website requires technical and design requirements to meet customer needs.
2. Websites need to attract and engage visitors, provide useful information, and create a positive impression of the business.
3. Effective website design focuses on usability, accessibility, and building trust with visitors to achieve business goals like encouraging return visits.
Email marketing has changed marketing in 5 key ways:
1. Email allows for massive individualized distribution at very low cost.
2. Email makes it much easier to build large customer lists.
3. Email allows marketers to reduce lead time and bring products to market more quickly.
4. Email enables dynamic personalization capabilities through tools like segmentation.
5. Email provides far more measurable analytics than previous marketing methods.
The document is a presentation about the power of social media and the professional networking site LinkedIn. It is presented in 4 parts: React, Review, Reflect, and Recreate. The presentation encourages participants to think about their career and social media use, review the key aspects of LinkedIn, reflect on their own LinkedIn profile and experience, and then recreate or improve their profile. The overall message is that individuals have power and control over their social media presence, particularly on LinkedIn, to further their careers and professional networks.
Welcome to join! We are really proud to announce the start of Ericsson Application Awards 2011. Ericsson envisions a future world of 50 billion connected devices impacting the way we live and the environment around us
Ericsson Labs m2m service enablement presentation at Mobile Monday London m2m event May 16 2011.
https://labs.ericsson.com/developer-community/blog/mobile-monday-london-m2m-event-summarized
This webinar discussed the growth of connected devices and the Internet of Things. It noted that by 2020 there will be over 50 billion connected devices, vastly outnumbering people. These connected devices will accelerate opportunities across many sectors like transportation, energy, agriculture, and healthcare by making things smarter. However, this growth will exacerbate the looming spectrum crunch. The webinar outlined five policy steps needed to support this growth, including making more spectrum available, and five key steps to advance broader societal gains through areas like smart infrastructure and healthcare devices.
Regional Isation through Mobilisation - The Digital Work Hub ProjectRussell Mason
This document outlines plans to develop a digital economy on the Sunshine Coast in Australia. It discusses how previous strategic planning led to the development of a draft Digital Action Plan with three priorities: improving digital infrastructure through investments; developing digital skills in the community and businesses; and fostering a digital culture of innovation. The plan proposes 15 actions to guide implementation over three years, with the goal of establishing the region as a leader in the digital economy through collaboration.
A talk provoking forward thinking with regards to social media, mobile, and mobile payments. What are the opportunities for tapping into networks and advancing marketing & PR alongside the rise of mobile payments?
This document discusses Huawei, a leading global ICT solutions provider. It provides an overview of Huawei, including that it is a private company established in 1987 with over 150,000 employees worldwide and $39.5 billion in revenue in 2013. The document also summarizes Huawei's solutions for smart cities, including offerings for smart transportation, healthcare, education, mobile services and safe cities.
Schneider-Electric Smart Energy for cities for BCN SCWC FINAL 11-19-14Alistair Pim
Smart cities are becoming more digitized, mobile, social, and connected as mega trends emerge. An integrated city-wide platform can optimize urban services and maximize efficiency by intelligently connecting operational and IT systems. While technology is important, people are vital to the success of smart energy initiatives in cities. Examples of smart energy projects include benchmarking energy usage in Boston, performance contracting to save energy in Houston, a smart grid project in Lyon, and district energy management in London.
Lev Gonick - Building the Smart Connected City – Piloting a Landmark FTTH Inn...Shane Mitchell
This document discusses the history and future of cities in the context of advancing information and communication technologies. It notes predictions from the 1960s-2000s that cities would dissolve or become unnecessary due to new technologies enabling remote work and communication. However, cities continued growing rapidly in the 20th century. The document then outlines a proposal to build an ultra-high speed fiber network in a major US city to pilot smart grid, telehealth, education and other applications and connect 5000 households to accelerate innovation.
The document discusses how the internet is connecting more people, processes, data and things through various devices. By 2020, it is estimated that 50 billion devices will be connected. While only 0.05% of the world's data is currently analyzed, opportunities exist in using big data across various industries like manufacturing, retail, finance and healthcare. For countries and businesses to take advantage of these opportunities, greater internet connectivity through both fixed and mobile networks will be needed. The cloud can help provide this connectivity and allow for collaboration using data.
This document discusses various topics related to urban planning and public involvement in visioning processes. It provides examples of past visioning efforts and outlines strategies for effective communication and widespread public involvement. These strategies include targeting different population categories, creating an identity and prominent web presence, allowing public input on critical decisions, and incorporating feedback from public workshops. The document emphasizes that implementing an effective process is important to realize a vision and that such implementation requires consideration of economic and market factors.
What is the Internet of Things (not)?
Nest thermostat integrates many data sources to drive action
IoT products create value by making sense of data
IoT developers become increasingly data-centric
Devices are just part of the story, IoT is all about...
Consumer market or enterprise market?
2007: Enterprises are the obvious opportunity for smartphones
2015: Consumer technology becomes enterprise technology
Consumer technology boosts clinical trials
Cities opt for traffic data generated by... citizens
Drone innovation: made for enthusiasts, used in enterprises
IoT developer ecosystems are emerging consumer-first
IoT is in 2008 in smartphone years
The era of standalone products is over
Some other things that exchange data with Nest
The boundaries between verticals are making less and less sense
IoT developers are flocking to open platforms in all verticals
Waukesha County Business Alliance - Key Industries 2019 (121318)Pendio Group
This document provides an overview of technology trends and their impact on business and society. It discusses the accelerating rate of technological change and how this will disrupt existing models in every sector. Exponential technologies like artificial intelligence, robotics, and digital platforms will converge to transform entire industries and create new business ecosystems. Organizations must adapt by developing new skills and collaborating more closely with technology partners to create innovative solutions and remain competitive in this rapidly changing environment.
This document summarizes a presentation by Thanachart Numnonda, the director of Software Park Thailand, about technology trends and the future vision and mission of Software Park Thailand. It discusses how emerging technologies like cloud computing, mobile applications, and social media present opportunities for Software Park Thailand to become a platform and community on the internet rather than being location-based. The presentation envisions Software Park Thailand strengthening the local software industry through initiatives like a mobile/cloud development space, software marketplace, and technology transfer programs, while positioning itself and local companies to succeed in an increasingly globalized and technology-driven business environment.
This document summarizes a presentation by Thanachart Numnonda, the director of Software Park Thailand, about technology trends and the future vision and mission of Software Park Thailand. It discusses how emerging technologies like cloud computing, mobile applications, and social media present opportunities for Software Park Thailand to become a platform and community on the internet rather than being location-based. The presentation envisions Software Park Thailand strengthening the software industry through initiatives like a mobile/cloud development space, software marketplace, and technology transfer programs, to help position Thailand to succeed in the new technology landscape.
The document compares ICT competitiveness between Thailand and other ASEAN nations. It shows that Thailand has a larger developer population and more CMMI-certified companies than countries like Vietnam and Indonesia, but lags behind Singapore. Thailand ranks 50th in IT industry competitiveness, with an internet bandwidth per user of 10.6 kbps and a network readiness index of 77. The document also provides data on ICT usage and developer/CMMI company statistics for other ASEAN countries.
The document discusses how the mobile ecosystem is influencing traditional media industries. It notes that media industries are facing a multidimensional crisis as revenue sources shrink due to declining advertising rates and changing consumption habits. Distribution models have also changed as application stores have become prevalent channels that platforms now control. Management structures in traditional media need to adapt to stay relevant in this new environment where users expect to engage with content across multiple screens.
In this presentation from GTEC 2011, Canada's Government Technology Event, Cisco Canada's CTO Jeff Seifert "connects the dots" on technology trends such as the rapid acceleration of video adoption, consumer devices in the workplace, the impacts of social media, increasing security requirements, data centre and desktop virtualization and smart buildings - and what it all means today and in the future.
Follow Cisco Canada on Twitter at http://www.twitter.com/CiscoCanada
Read more from Jeff on the Cisco Canada Blog: http://ciscocanada.wordpress.com/author/jeffseifert/
The document summarizes key technology trends from CES 2018, including 5G connectivity, artificial intelligence, robotics, voice interfaces, biometrics, virtual and augmented reality, and smart cities. 5G will enable higher speeds and lower latency. AI applications include image recognition, medical diagnosis, and auto safety. Consumer robotics is moving beyond simple tasks. Biometrics like facial recognition are becoming more common. Smart cities use technology to improve services like transportation, energy usage, and public safety.
Building Together Algiers Smart City - Smart Cities Summit 2018 - AlgiersSmart Algiers
This document discusses building a smart city in Algiers, Algeria and outlines some of the challenges facing its development. It describes Huawei's smart city solution which includes key components like a cloud data center, intelligent operation center, IOT infrastructure, and communications network to address issues and help modernize the city. The solution has been implemented in over 100 cities globally.
App To The Future - What Next November 2010BCM Group
'App To The Future' addresses the rise of the connected device and the use of apps to access information. It highlights the trends for marketers to consider as consumers adopt this technology and demonstrates BCM's strategic tool for analysing the suitability of an app for your brand.
Capillary Networks integrates the machine and IoT devices as integral part of...Ericsson Labs
The document discusses opportunities and challenges around capillary networks and Ericsson's proposed solution. It describes how Ericsson's IoT framework would provide automated service creation, end-to-end management, and security for enterprises and service providers by integrating capillary and mobile network domains through a virtual middleware and cloud. The solution aims to simplify deployment, provide authentication based on SIM credentials, and offer end-to-end connectivity, management, and analytics.
Ericsson 5 g at mobile world congress 2014 Ericsson Labs
5G will be the next generation of wireless technology, aiming to provide extremely fast and reliable connectivity that can support a massive number of devices. It combines technologies like LTE and WiFi with new innovations like millimeter wave communications between 10-300 GHz. Research and standardization are ongoing, with the goal of commercial 5G networks launching around 2020 that can handle requirements like super real-time communication, work in dense crowded areas, and enable widespread machine-to-machine communication.
Evolved Cloud Collaboration Presentation at MWC14 by Ericsson Research Ericsson Labs
Our distributed cloud orchestration solution prototype is capable of managing resources in geographically distributed data centers and satisfies the stringent needs of any real-time application.
This document provides an overview of NoSQL databases and HBase. It discusses why NoSQL databases are gaining popularity due to trends in data and architecture. It also summarizes the CAP theorem and how different databases balance consistency, availability and partition tolerance. The document describes research activities including evaluating HBase for telco usage and performing bulk processing tests on HBase. It finds that while HBase can scale horizontally, managing compaction storms and small files is challenging.
Welcome to the Ericsson Application Awards 2014
Is your app a winner? Developers, startups and students who have an idea for a great app, here is your opportunity! You are invited to submit your entries and compete in the Ericsson Application Awards 2014 for the best Android or iOS apps.
How will working life be organized to meet changing behaviors and emerging technologies? How can we contribute toward making the next generation of working life a one where people can innovate, collaborate and balance their lives outside work better? We are open to your suggestions.
This competition will give you and your team the opportunity to gain a foothold in the app industry, while also earning recognition and making contacts within the telecom industry
Deadline February 28, 2014.
Details: www.ericssonapplicationawards.com
5G for the Networked Society beyond 2020Ericsson Labs
This document discusses 5G wireless access technologies that will enable the networked society beyond 2020. It outlines key challenges like supporting a massive growth in connected devices and traffic volume, with requirements ranging from multi-Gbps to hundreds of Mbps. 5G will evolve existing wireless technologies and introduce complementary new technologies to address these challenges. It will provide affordable and sustainable solutions through an ultra-dense network architecture using technologies like multi-hop communication, device-to-device communication, and spectrum sharing across licensed and unlicensed bands from 300 MHz to 300 GHz.
The document discusses Ericsson's 3D visual communication demo showcased at Mobile World Congress 2013. The demo aims to improve video conferencing by adding depth perception through 3D technology. It allows for more realistic and immersive communication. While the demo currently uses glasses, the goal is to deploy glasses-free auto-stereoscopic displays. Further work is needed to standardize new 3D video codecs and implement them in real-time for high quality 3D visual communication products and services. The technology brings benefits for user experience, businesses, sustainability and society.
Openflow Stanford University - Ericsson CollaborationEricsson Labs
1. Stanford University and Ericsson are collaborating on OpenFlow and SDN research to improve network performance and enable new applications.
2. Their work includes evaluating SDN architecture designs, improving network resiliency and reducing latency between controllers and switches.
3. Inline service chaining allows dynamic ordering of network services for subscribers based on policies, with different service paths for different traffic types.
- Federated networked cloud allows for rapid and on-demand provisioning of cloud connectivity across the world by establishing and managing distributed cloud resources within and across providers' domains.
- It enables enterprise users to deploy infrastructure in different datacenters and connect them over wide area networks on demand.
- Service providers can collaborate by bundling their cloud and network services to gain new business opportunities and provide unified solutions to customers.
Mobile network data is a unique and valuable asset for mobile operators. By analyzing network data and combining it with external data sources, operators can gain deep insights into consumer behavior and network performance. This allows operators to better understand individual consumers, identify new business opportunities through partnerships, and improve network efficiency. The prototype data analysis tool presented demonstrates how network data can be made understandable through visualization and interaction. It highlights the potential for increased consumer loyalty and new revenue streams from leveraging the power of big data. However, consumer awareness and concerns regarding privacy must be addressed through transparency, perceived value of any data sharing, and only utilizing anonymized and aggregated information.
Technology Challenges in the Networked SocietyEricsson Labs
The document discusses technology challenges in the networked society presented at Mobile World Congress 2013. It addresses challenges related to devices, data/information, services, networks, clouds, management, security, and sustainability in an increasingly connected world. Key issues include supporting a wide range of devices and connectivity methods, ensuring coverage and scalability, managing large amounts of data, and maintaining security, privacy, and trust across complex cloud and network infrastructures.
This document discusses how cities can become more resilient by gathering data from various systems and devices, using machine learning to develop knowledge representations, and employing reasoning algorithms to decide the best actions in response to unexpected events. The goal is for cities to respond to events effectively by coordinating public services and resources through interoperable systems informed by sophisticated event analysis.
The document discusses the transition to a "networked society" driven by information and communications technology (ICT). It notes that ICT is impacting everything from production to organizational structures to information availability. The document outlines some of the major technological transitions that have occurred every 50 years. It also discusses challenges of the networked society like the growth in the number of devices, demands on networks and cloud infrastructure, and security and management issues. The document promotes collaboration between industry, government and academia to address these challenges and realize the networked society. It provides an overview of the technologies being demonstrated by Ericsson to illustrate solutions for issues in services, devices, networks and cloud.
Towards Timely Efficient Semantic Reasoning for the Networked SocietyEricsson Labs
This presentation is a summary of the paper we presented at MobiCASE 2012.
It presents our work in progress on enabling computerized reasoning capability in machine-to-machine communication scenarios for the Networked Society (or Internet of Things).
For more details, please go to: https://labs.ericsson.com/blog/semantic-reasoning-for-the-networked-society
Stream analytics for churn prediction from Ericsson ResearchEricsson Labs
This document discusses applying stream mining techniques to predict customer churn. Stream mining can continuously update prediction rules to quickly react to changing churn patterns and reasons over time. The proof of concept uses a data stream of simulated customer events to train an Adaptive Hoeffding Tree algorithm and predict churn. It tracks churn rates, prediction accuracy, and the business impact of retaining predicted churners. Stream mining allows autonomous adaptation to concept drift, unlike traditional techniques requiring human intervention and slower adaptation.
Geo Location Messaging on Ericsson LabsEricsson Labs
https://labs.ericsson.com/apis/geo-location-messaging/
The Geo Location messaging API provides developers with the ability to push content to subscribers depending on location areas.
https://labs.ericsson.com/apis?api_category=199
Ericsson Labs' presentation at Over the Air 2011.
Examples of how to establish a trusted identity, how to do mash-ups of multiple data feeds and how to secure peer-to-peer communication.
Distributed Shared Memory on Ericsson LabsEricsson Labs
The document describes Distributed Shared Memory (DSM), a technology that enables a distributed in-memory database for JavaScript applications. DSM allows multiple clients to access and modify the same data simultaneously. It resolves merge conflicts automatically and notifies clients of data changes. Developers can focus on building interactive web collaboration software without dealing with networking, databases, or concurrency issues. DSM supports both persistent storage and transient data sharing across clients in real-time.
Skybuffer SAM4U tool for SAP license adoptionTatiana Kojar
Manage and optimize your license adoption and consumption with SAM4U, an SAP free customer software asset management tool.
SAM4U, an SAP complimentary software asset management tool for customers, delivers a detailed and well-structured overview of license inventory and usage with a user-friendly interface. We offer a hosted, cost-effective, and performance-optimized SAM4U setup in the Skybuffer Cloud environment. You retain ownership of the system and data, while we manage the ABAP 7.58 infrastructure, ensuring fixed Total Cost of Ownership (TCO) and exceptional services through the SAP Fiori interface.
Driving Business Innovation: Latest Generative AI Advancements & Success StorySafe Software
Are you ready to revolutionize how you handle data? Join us for a webinar where we’ll bring you up to speed with the latest advancements in Generative AI technology and discover how leveraging FME with tools from giants like Google Gemini, Amazon, and Microsoft OpenAI can supercharge your workflow efficiency.
During the hour, we’ll take you through:
Guest Speaker Segment with Hannah Barrington: Dive into the world of dynamic real estate marketing with Hannah, the Marketing Manager at Workspace Group. Hear firsthand how their team generates engaging descriptions for thousands of office units by integrating diverse data sources—from PDF floorplans to web pages—using FME transformers, like OpenAIVisionConnector and AnthropicVisionConnector. This use case will show you how GenAI can streamline content creation for marketing across the board.
Ollama Use Case: Learn how Scenario Specialist Dmitri Bagh has utilized Ollama within FME to input data, create custom models, and enhance security protocols. This segment will include demos to illustrate the full capabilities of FME in AI-driven processes.
Custom AI Models: Discover how to leverage FME to build personalized AI models using your data. Whether it’s populating a model with local data for added security or integrating public AI tools, find out how FME facilitates a versatile and secure approach to AI.
We’ll wrap up with a live Q&A session where you can engage with our experts on your specific use cases, and learn more about optimizing your data workflows with AI.
This webinar is ideal for professionals seeking to harness the power of AI within their data management systems while ensuring high levels of customization and security. Whether you're a novice or an expert, gain actionable insights and strategies to elevate your data processes. Join us to see how FME and AI can revolutionize how you work with data!
Dandelion Hashtable: beyond billion requests per second on a commodity serverAntonios Katsarakis
This slide deck presents DLHT, a concurrent in-memory hashtable. Despite efforts to optimize hashtables, that go as far as sacrificing core functionality, state-of-the-art designs still incur multiple memory accesses per request and block request processing in three cases. First, most hashtables block while waiting for data to be retrieved from memory. Second, open-addressing designs, which represent the current state-of-the-art, either cannot free index slots on deletes or must block all requests to do so. Third, index resizes block every request until all objects are copied to the new index. Defying folklore wisdom, DLHT forgoes open-addressing and adopts a fully-featured and memory-aware closed-addressing design based on bounded cache-line-chaining. This design offers lock-free index operations and deletes that free slots instantly, (2) completes most requests with a single memory access, (3) utilizes software prefetching to hide memory latencies, and (4) employs a novel non-blocking and parallel resizing. In a commodity server and a memory-resident workload, DLHT surpasses 1.6B requests per second and provides 3.5x (12x) the throughput of the state-of-the-art closed-addressing (open-addressing) resizable hashtable on Gets (Deletes).
How to Interpret Trends in the Kalyan Rajdhani Mix Chart.pdfChart Kalyan
A Mix Chart displays historical data of numbers in a graphical or tabular form. The Kalyan Rajdhani Mix Chart specifically shows the results of a sequence of numbers over different periods.
Discover top-tier mobile app development services, offering innovative solutions for iOS and Android. Enhance your business with custom, user-friendly mobile applications.
Introduction of Cybersecurity with OSS at Code Europe 2024Hiroshi SHIBATA
I develop the Ruby programming language, RubyGems, and Bundler, which are package managers for Ruby. Today, I will introduce how to enhance the security of your application using open-source software (OSS) examples from Ruby and RubyGems.
The first topic is CVE (Common Vulnerabilities and Exposures). I have published CVEs many times. But what exactly is a CVE? I'll provide a basic understanding of CVEs and explain how to detect and handle vulnerabilities in OSS.
Next, let's discuss package managers. Package managers play a critical role in the OSS ecosystem. I'll explain how to manage library dependencies in your application.
I'll share insights into how the Ruby and RubyGems core team works to keep our ecosystem safe. By the end of this talk, you'll have a better understanding of how to safeguard your code.
Taking AI to the Next Level in Manufacturing.pdfssuserfac0301
Read Taking AI to the Next Level in Manufacturing to gain insights on AI adoption in the manufacturing industry, such as:
1. How quickly AI is being implemented in manufacturing.
2. Which barriers stand in the way of AI adoption.
3. How data quality and governance form the backbone of AI.
4. Organizational processes and structures that may inhibit effective AI adoption.
6. Ideas and approaches to help build your organization's AI strategy.
Programming Foundation Models with DSPy - Meetup SlidesZilliz
Prompting language models is hard, while programming language models is easy. In this talk, I will discuss the state-of-the-art framework DSPy for programming foundation models with its powerful optimizers and runtime constraint system.
Connector Corner: Seamlessly power UiPath Apps, GenAI with prebuilt connectorsDianaGray10
Join us to learn how UiPath Apps can directly and easily interact with prebuilt connectors via Integration Service--including Salesforce, ServiceNow, Open GenAI, and more.
The best part is you can achieve this without building a custom workflow! Say goodbye to the hassle of using separate automations to call APIs. By seamlessly integrating within App Studio, you can now easily streamline your workflow, while gaining direct access to our Connector Catalog of popular applications.
We’ll discuss and demo the benefits of UiPath Apps and connectors including:
Creating a compelling user experience for any software, without the limitations of APIs.
Accelerating the app creation process, saving time and effort
Enjoying high-performance CRUD (create, read, update, delete) operations, for
seamless data management.
Speakers:
Russell Alfeche, Technology Leader, RPA at qBotic and UiPath MVP
Charlie Greenberg, host
AppSec PNW: Android and iOS Application Security with MobSFAjin Abraham
Mobile Security Framework - MobSF is a free and open source automated mobile application security testing environment designed to help security engineers, researchers, developers, and penetration testers to identify security vulnerabilities, malicious behaviours and privacy concerns in mobile applications using static and dynamic analysis. It supports all the popular mobile application binaries and source code formats built for Android and iOS devices. In addition to automated security assessment, it also offers an interactive testing environment to build and execute scenario based test/fuzz cases against the application.
This talk covers:
Using MobSF for static analysis of mobile applications.
Interactive dynamic security assessment of Android and iOS applications.
Solving Mobile app CTF challenges.
Reverse engineering and runtime analysis of Mobile malware.
How to shift left and integrate MobSF/mobsfscan SAST and DAST in your build pipeline.
zkStudyClub - LatticeFold: A Lattice-based Folding Scheme and its Application...Alex Pruden
Folding is a recent technique for building efficient recursive SNARKs. Several elegant folding protocols have been proposed, such as Nova, Supernova, Hypernova, Protostar, and others. However, all of them rely on an additively homomorphic commitment scheme based on discrete log, and are therefore not post-quantum secure. In this work we present LatticeFold, the first lattice-based folding protocol based on the Module SIS problem. This folding protocol naturally leads to an efficient recursive lattice-based SNARK and an efficient PCD scheme. LatticeFold supports folding low-degree relations, such as R1CS, as well as high-degree relations, such as CCS. The key challenge is to construct a secure folding protocol that works with the Ajtai commitment scheme. The difficulty, is ensuring that extracted witnesses are low norm through many rounds of folding. We present a novel technique using the sumcheck protocol to ensure that extracted witnesses are always low norm no matter how many rounds of folding are used. Our evaluation of the final proof system suggests that it is as performant as Hypernova, while providing post-quantum security.
Paper Link: https://eprint.iacr.org/2024/257
Have you ever been confused by the myriad of choices offered by AWS for hosting a website or an API?
Lambda, Elastic Beanstalk, Lightsail, Amplify, S3 (and more!) can each host websites + APIs. But which one should we choose?
Which one is cheapest? Which one is fastest? Which one will scale to meet our needs?
Join me in this session as we dive into each AWS hosting service to determine which one is best for your scenario and explain why!
6. Table of megacities
Rank Megacity Country Continent Population Annual Growth
1 Tokyo Japan Asia 34,200,000 0.60%
2 Guangzhou China Asia 24,900,000 4.00%
3 Seoul South Korea Asia 24,500,000 1.40%
4 Delhi India Asia 23,900,000 4.60%
5 Mumbai India Asia 23,300,000 2.90%
6 Mexico City Mexico North America 22,800,000 2.00%
7 New York City USA North America 22,200,000 0.30%
8 São Paulo Brazil South America 20,800,000 1.40%
9 Manila [21] Philippines Asia 20,100,000 2.50%
10 Shanghai China Asia 18,800,000 2.20%
11 Jakarta Indonesia Asia 18,700,000 2.00%
12 Los Angeles USA North America 17,900,000 1.10%
13 Karachi Pakistan Asia 16,900,000 4.90%
14 Osaka Japan Asia 16,800,000 0.15%
15 Kolkata India Asia 16,600,000 2.00%
16 Cairo Egypt Africa 15,300,000 2.60%
17 Buenos Aires Argentina South America 14,800,000 1.00%
18 Moscow Russia Europe 14,800,000 0.20%
19 Dhaka Bangladesh Asia 14,000,000 4.10%
20 Beijing China Asia 13,900,000 2.70%
21 Tehran Iran Asia 13,100,000 2.60%
22 Istanbul Turkey Europe & Asia 13,000,000 2.80%
23 London United Kingdom Europe 12,500,000 0.70%
24 Rio de Janeiro Brazil South America 12,500,000 1.00%
25 Lagos Nigeria Africa 12,100,000 3.20%
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26 Paris France Europe 10,197,678 1.00%
7. Megacity challenges
› Growth – continous
re-building of infrastructures and housing
› Slums – insufficient housing,
sanitation, education & healthcare
› Traffic – chaos
and inefficiency in transports
› Urban sprawl – increased
burden on transport (cars or public)
› Gentrification – digital
divide between communities
› Air pollution – damage
of natural environment and health
› Sustainability – inefficiency in
energy production & distribution, recycling
› Crime – safety and
control in public spaces as well as homes
Page 7
8. the Connected
Things Vision
10X scale of devices from 5B to 50Billion,
100X scale of connected tags and
1000X scale of mobile data traffic
by 2020
9. inflection points –
10X the Opportunity
THINGS 50 B
Digital Society
Sustainable World
Personal
Mobile
Inflection
points PEOPLE 5.0 B
Global
Connectivity
PLACES ~0.5 B
1875 1900 1925 1950 1975 2000 2025
Source: Ericsson
Page 9
10. Drivers for networked everything
People Lifestyle
Health
Convenience
Safety
Businesses Societies
Productivity Sustainability
Cost efficiency Safety
Regulations Security
Assets Social cost
Technology
Broadband ubiquity Cost of connected device
Everything that benefits from a network
connection will have one
Page 10
11. The tags Opportunity
TAGS 5T
Augmented
Everyday Life
Digital Society
Sustainable World
THINGS 50 B
Personal
Mobile
Inflection
points
Global PEOPLE 5.0 B
Connectivity
PLACES ~0.5 B
1875 1900 1925 1950 1975 2000 2025
Source: Ericsson
Page 11
14. Connected things opportunity
data and context analysis
› m2m devices will produce a huge amount of Data
› Data aggregation, filtering and analysis needed to extract
Context and Knowledge
Page 14
16. The location data goldmine
Transport: Traffic prediction, flow
optimizations, model creation
Government: Calibration of “Mobile devices in America are
analysis models, travel surveys, generating something like 600
real-time alerts and warnings billion geo-spatially tagged
transactions per day”
Advertising: Campaign planning, Jeff Jonas, Chief Scientist,
site selection, measurements, IBM Entity Analytics Group
consumer behavior studies
End-user services: Service
personalization, recommendations
Page 16
17. Connected things opportunity
Engagements in Verticals
CE and Automotive Retail Gaming Education
Home Transport Banking
•Connected home •Safe traffic/ • Product information • Networked games • Teaching
•Connected CE Cooperative Cars • Shopping experience • Interactive games • Learning
•Social Web of Things •Connected Car • Location based mobile ads • Context based • Museum and Arts
•User interaction •ITS info brokering • Consumer loyalty building
•Ticketing • NFC enabled payments
Smart Grid Health Smart Cities Manufacturing Agriculture
•ICT for Smart Grid •Remote monitoring •Comm infrastructure • Mining • Fish farms
•EHV charging •Assisted living •Utility oriented applications • Process industry • Greenhouse monitor/control
•Demand/Response •Behavioral change •Health oriented applications • Component industry • Tea plantations
•Micro generation •Integrated solutions •Transport oriented • Forestry
•Storage •Treatment compliance applications
•User interaction
Page 17
18. CARRIER GRADE LOGISTICS
1. Trucks register 6. Push alarm
2. ERP order 7. Issue an express order
3. Push the order 8. Push the order
4. Submit incident 9. Issue an adapted route
5. Generate Alarm 10. Push the route
Web Delivery
App Truck
ALARM
Operator
Composition Web
Engine Connectivity
Enabler
Web Express Delivery
Page 18 App Truck
19. Stockholm Royal Seaport
- smart city/utilities
A world-class environmental
urban neighborhood co2 reduction
Information management
A showcase for energy and system
environmental solutions
End-user awareness
10 000 new apartments Smart grid communication
30 000 workplaces
Page 19
25. Social web of things
Most end-users have a Weak
understanding of Wireless
Networks
Most end-users have a Good
understanding of Social Networks
a Social Web of Things makes
users naturally aware of the power
of “networkedness”
Page 25
26. A concept demo of SWOT
In CAPITALS
Slide subtitle
Page 26
27. Swot in use at home
Personal
Network AS
Connected
Home GW
ZigBee-USB
Internet
Home network
RJ45-USB
Power network
Power sensor/actuator
Energy Sensor & Monitor
SWoT application
(device management,
house sleep mode)
Energy management
Android phone with SWoT client
Page 27
30. ericsson labs APIs
Maps & positioning Communication User & network
Web Maps SMS Send & Information
Receive Mobile
Identification
Mobile Location Group Voice Mixer Mobile Network
look-up
Mobile Maps Network probe
Mobile Push
3D Landscape
asyncvoice NFC & Sensors
Tag Tool
Web Technologies
Media & graphics Sensor Networking
Application Platform
Web
Connectivity
Face Detector Mobile Sensor
actuator link
EventSource
Streaming Media
Security
Web background Mobile Web Security
Converting Media Bootstrap
Web Device
connectivity CAPTCHA
Text-to-speech
Distributed
shared memory Oauth2 framework
Web Real-Time Machine Learning
communication Cluster Identity Management
Constructor Framework
Page 30
31. Web Real-Time communication
› Get early access to experimental browser features for
real-time voice and video communication (Web-RTC)
Early experimentation
– Download our browser
– Build your own “Web-RTC”-
enabled web app
– No plugins needed
– Provide API feedback
Page 31
32. ericsson application awards 2012
Theme
› apps for the networked society
€60,000 prize money
› Student and SME categories
Android app
› Use at least one ericsson labs api
Key partner:
July 2010 Feb 2012 Global May 2012
Launch Stage 1-2 Submission Evaluation Prize Ceremony
Page 32
33. technology for good – apps competition
› First stage of EAA2012 -- Technology for Good Apps
Competition -- we asked developers to come up with
applications for a good cause.
› Submission deadline: Oct 10th
› Winners will be announced Oct 18th
› Prizes: Sony Ericsson smart phones
› Also, the winning team will also help put a girl through school - she will
receive a scholarship in the team's name.
http://www.ericssonapplicationawards.com/tea
m/blog/how-good-are-you
Page 33