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Will the Internet of Things be the next green field?

I’ve been looking at the MEAN.io stack technologies (it seems like the new hotness) and I can see this being the underlying the language for the “Internet of Things”.  IoT is a term that has slowly crept up into the consumer marketplace displacing the “home automation” trend, but its been in use in many other industries like supply chain and manufacturing for years.  It popped up in the consumer mindshare in a big way in this years CES and MWC.

As we’ve seen the mobile space being dominated by the iOS and Android ecosystems, innovation takes place on those platforms, on their terms.  IoT is proving to be the next green field1.

If you read any of Ben Thompson’s work at Stratechery.com, he wrote a wonderful article in 2014 called “The State of Consumer Technology at the end of 2014“, where he outlines what he calls the “Three Epochs of Consumer Tech”:

The Three Epochs of Technology

Extending the model below, it’s clear why people like Apple, Amazon, Google, and challengers like LG, Samsung, Xiaomi, Huawei, etc. will be leading the charge into the IoT space over the next 1-3 years.

Epoch PC Internet Mobile IoT
Communications Email Facebook Messaging Voice?
Work Office Google “Sharing” Uber, Amazon,
OS Windows Web Browser Android / iOS AWS?
Scale 10s of Millions 100s of Millions Billions 10s of Billions

Extending that illustration, you can map the impact of connected household goods to tens of billions of connected devices; it’s an exciting opportunity.

As with any new technology, there will always be unintended consequences.   As you increase the number of connected devices by a magnitude, you’ll inevitably introduce a completely different number of variables to the equation.

Take the upgrade cycle for instance. The upgrade rate of home appliances are a magnitude longer than any phone or device.2  It’s not uncommon to keep an appliance for 10+ years.  Imagine how the industry will change during that time? Whole services and protocols will go in and out of fashion. Will appliance manufacturers keep the software up to date? Surely closed ecosystems will age out and introduce planned obsolescence–look to more open development platforms to keep devices up and running in the coming years.3

A lot of interesting questions

Who will provide the fabric of the IoT:

Where is the hub for IoT?

Who will provide the OS for IoT?

Who are the Big players in the the IoT space?

What’s the big payoff for consumers?


  1. To a lesser extent, you could say this with VR as well, but what is markedly different is the scale between the two areas.  We’re talking 10s of millions of devices vs. billions, respectively. 
  2. As much as I am enticed to upgrade my aging iPad3 (from 2012), with the new iPad Pro 9.7″ launched this week, I think I’ll wait one more version.  I think Tim Cook underestimates the upgrade cycle for the iPad.  It’s more akin to a PC and there is no cellular phone provider to offer upgrade subsidies to catalyze its upgrade cycle like with the iPhone. 
  3. I have the same concern with automotive software–it will be interesting to see how Tesla fares.  I think Apple Car and Android Auto is the future. 
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