Enterprise IoT is another direction of IoT industry development, which businesses are actively adopting. Embedded technologies for large organizations bring new challenges in terms of connectivity, network stability, and data security.
Ultra-Wideband (UWB) has moved from niche industrial RTLS to mainstream, with easier deployment via enterprise access points and standards. Discover how UWB is transforming asset tracking, logistics, and manufacturing with cost-effective, sub-meter accuracy.
Explore the top 5 use cases of Software-Defined Connectivity (SDC) and learn how SDC reduces costs, improves compliance, and accelerates IoT innovation.
Today almost 30 percent of embedded projects have over 100,000 lines of code, and this increasing complexity is now the number one driver of project delays, and the reason 60 percent of an embedded development project's cost is software.
Integrating Non-Terrestrial Networks (NTN) with cellular IoT delivers seamless global connectivity, powered by the nRF9151 module for hybrid GEO, LEO, and terrestrial communication.
Without the coders, engineers, entrepreneurs, and innovators of tomorrow emerging from the classrooms—and soon—it will become increasingly difficult to advance society and tackle diverse global challenges. As things stand now, a global technology talent shortage threatens to stifle progress across all tech sectors.
Smart lighting is a key component of smart commercial buildings and the connected home. Based on LEDs—which use at least 75 percent less energy, and last up to 25 times longer than traditional incandescent lighting, according to the U.S. Department of Energy (DoE)—combined with Bluetooth LE SoCs like Nordic’s nRF52, nRF53, and the forthcoming nRF54 Series, smart lighting brings illumination into the modern age.
As the IoT market is slowly maturing, IoT systems are becoming increasingly complex and versatile. As a result, embedded devices are composed of distinct firmware components made by different parties working together, often running on multiple MCUs simultaneously.
The development of IoT agriculture has seen a rapid increase in recent years as advancements in technology have enabled farmers to monitor and control their equipment remotely. This allows them to take care of their crops from anywhere in the world, making it possible for them to monitor the health and growth rates of their plants in real time.
Inside the home, Virtual Reality (VR) and Augmented Reality (AR) are moving in on traditional electronic gaming territory. Headsets and sound systems help players feel as if they are actually inside their favorite game. Wireless tech helps make the experience even more immersive by connecting headset and handset(s) for low-latency game control.
Technology has a tendency to move from hardware to software, as physical components give way to virtual features. That trend certainly holds in IoT connectivity.