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Communications Network Sony The Internet Technology

Sony Builds IoT Chip With a 60-Mile Range (engadget.com) 93

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Engadget: Sony is quietly launching a chip that could change how e-bikes, cars, street lamps and all kinds of other connected devices can relay information. The module, when installed on any IoT object, will allow it send data to Sony's proprietary low-power wide area (LPWA) ELTRES network launching this fall. It can transmit up to about 60 miles and work in noisy urban environments on objects moving at high speeds, opening up a lot of new applications in security, monitoring, tracking and more. Sony's ELTRES LPWA network harnesses low-power wireless technology to transfer low-bit data across a wide area, with lower power consumption, making it feasible to connect a wide range of devices.

The CXM1501GR chip transmits signals in the 920MHz band to Sony's ELTRES network, and is also equipped with GPS/GNSS sensors to obtain time and position data. Sony said it'll work in a "broad range of IoT devices, aiming to develop various services making the most of stable wireless communications over long distances and while moving at high speeds, thereby creating a new market." In a use case document, Sony said the tech could be used to "help friends find each other at a ski hill," track wildlife, geolocate ships, follow yacht races, monitor bike rentals, while tracking numerous things like drones, rental cars and trains.
The chip is limited to Japan for now, but Sony has launched an application program for interested companies and the company does have plans to build out the network.
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Sony Builds IoT Chip With a 60-Mile Range

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  • F Sony (Score:2, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward

    I don't care how cool it is, I'm not signing up for a company that is both user-abusive and has a long history of favoring proprietary media formats.

    • Wow, I am surprised that your ethics are allowing you have technology powerful enough to post on Slashdot.
      Companies are not ethical roll models. They are in business because they make or offer a service for something that you (or someone else wants) then exchanges this product or service for money in exchange, presumably at a rate where the amount of money they bring in is greater then the cost of making the product and keeping the company running, as well to allow growth.

      Customers want to spend the least

    • by trevc ( 1471197 )
      LOL - I am sure Sony will be very upset to hear this.
    • by mspohr ( 589790 )

      Especially when there already exists a non-proprietary widely adopted alternative that works as well.

      https://lora-alliance.org/abou... [lora-alliance.org]

      https://www.thethingsnetwork.o... [thethingsnetwork.org]

  • Hacking time? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by OneHundredAndTen ( 1523865 ) on Wednesday May 29, 2019 @09:07AM (#58671490)
    IoT hardware manufacturers have a much-deserved reputation for not even paying lip service to security - the rest of the industry at least does that.
    • IoT hardware manufacturers have a much-deserved reputation for not even paying lip service to security - the rest of the industry at least does that.

      But this is Sony we're talking about. Their IoT chip will ship with a rootkit to guarantee your security.

    • by jbengt ( 874751 )
      60 mile range for hacking - what could possibly go wrong?
    • by mspohr ( 589790 )

      LoRaWAN (widely deployed, non-proprietary) has 128 bit security.
      https://www.thethingsnetwork.o... [thethingsnetwork.org]

  • Bandwidth (Score:4, Interesting)

    by Dan East ( 318230 ) on Wednesday May 29, 2019 @09:27AM (#58671554) Journal

    If I interpreted the information correctly, the payload is 128 bits of data over a 3 minute period (that is the minimum time / fastest refresh rate allowed). I'm not sure if the minimum refresh time of 3 minutes reflects that actual transport time (probably so), or if that is some kind of arbitrary delay to enforce the kind of usage they are desiring for this technology (and to allow whatever user load they are anticipating on the network in a given geographic proximity).

    This is also "one way" transmission (originates from the mobile devices), which is presumably because the receivers and antennas must be large / bulky / distributed for this to work. Thus this same technology cannot be used to send data back to the mobile devices.

    • You read correctly..

      This is LOW bandwidth data transmission that isn't useful for anything approaching even a low bandwidth, low resolution, video signal. This will be limited to basic telemetry use. Given the transmit delays, data correction overhead and deconfliction protocols, this is going to be limited to things like remote weather reporting with low update intervals, sensing non-time critical events, or even small amounts of telemetry where long latency is OK.

      Further, this isn't "new" technology i

  • As far as I know, most use cases for IoT stuff are already covered by existing solutions and big companies or governments have already picked their choice. Sigfox, LoRaWAN, LTE-M or just usual mobile stuff (CSD, SMS, 2G, 3G and 4G) are the winners depending on use cases. Usually you pick two or three of these to improve the reliability. The goldrush is already over.
  • by Anonymous Coward

    No fucking way am I going to buy into that.

    • by sinij ( 911942 )

      No fucking way am I going to buy into that.

      Silly rabbit, you think you will have a choice. Something like that will be included into every IoT, car, TV and appliance so Sony can make money selling your data. If you don't like it - you are welcome to go back to using Nokia flip phone (still on original battery charge).

  • Proprietary (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Diphthong ( 461653 ) on Wednesday May 29, 2019 @09:42AM (#58671630)

    I don't care if this thing as a 6,000 mile range, I am decidedly unexcited about signing up for a Sony-proprietary anything. Please place it in the pile next to Betamax, MemoryStick, and ATRAC.

    • by leonbev ( 111395 )

      Yeah... if they release this as an open standard like Wi-Fi or Zigbee, then you'll get developers interested. Otherwise, most of them aren't going to be interested in paying a "Sony Tax" on their new IoT products no matter how good the range is.

      Besides, I'd imagine that it probably doesn't cost all that much to embed a GSM or LTE cellular modem into your product nowadays. Those will work wherever you can get good cellular coverage.

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      It's not for you, it's for industrial customers who have had a good run with Sony gear. Betamax may have failed in the consumer space, but was quite successful in the commercial sector, for example.

      They will buy these things in vast quantities and run their own networks with them. Usual guaranteed availability for 10+ years, plenty of advance notice of last buy times, high probability of successor compatible products.

  • Sony FeliCA an example of launching a new format successfully. Others not so well received.
  • LoRaWAN came out in 2012 and there are open deployments of network nodes (https://www.thethingsnetwork.org/). Sony's solution looks interesting though. It is uplink only, which limits the applications a bit.

  • The Capitalistic Party (the largest political party in the US, thanks to the Citizens United call by SCOTUS) will be rolling out the anti-competitive, US job-protecting Huawie misinformation smear campaign to block Japan.

  • The summary has that breathless excited quality that says very little but tries to make it sound awesome. As far as I can glean, it is announcing the release of a chip that serves as the main mobile station component of a proprietary network technology. The first parts of the summary talk about "Sony's ELTRES network" as if such a thing was an existing network deployment. The unquoted wrap-up in the summary provides the true state: "The chip is limited to Japan for now, but [...] the company does have pl
    • by Klaxton ( 609696 )
      Agreed. There are already low-power transceivers available for ~920MHz and they don't go anywhere near 60 miles in typical use cases. You are lucky to get one mile.Maybe if their 'network' has base stations with antennas up on existing cellphone towers they can get double digits, but that is expensive infrastructure.
  • 128b every three minutes, receive-only is plenty for most weather station platforms I've dealt with. Usualy a pair of 12 bit temperatures (sun/shade possibly wet/dry bulb), some measure of insolation (10 bits for watts/m^2 or moles/m2/s). Wind direction is usually 10 bits (8 bits in crappy cheapo systems), and 10 bits for wind speed. Add some more bits for overhead, error checking, a rain gauge. Up to 60 miles from any mountain top relay. This would be a lot cheaper than sat links.

    Heck, I'd love some easy s

  • by drewsup ( 990717 )

    Things companies want connected to the internet, that really don't need connecting to the internet...

  • Of course, it will be controlled by Sony. This is a long-range, low data rate cell service you have to pay for. They say "high-speed", but that is relative. From the ETSI Standard [etsi.org] on page 15, the highest data rate should is 101.6kbits/s. Any error correction or protocol overhead comes out of that.

    Also, from the press release [orix.co.jp], it looks like you need service.

    TOKYO, Japan – October 25, 2018 – ORIX Corporation (“ORIX”), Sony Network Communications Inc. (“Sony Network Communi
  • I've got some experience with the 920MHz band and I don't see any way there can be low power transmission over 60 miles unless they have a really tall tower, no obstructions, and good directional antennas on both ends. In most realistic use cases the IOT device will be in an urban or suburban environment at near ground level which means lots of obstructions, and the antenna will be a 3-inch piece of wire.
    • I used to work at a Radio shop and me and a former coworker have been bickering over this, as I said what you said.

      They end units actually connect to a low-power wide-area (LPWA) ELTRES. I'm going to say that they figure the LPWA will be configured to cover about a 60 mile radius, with a bunch of receivers ALL OVER THE PLACE (like a cell tower network).

      Specs say the antenna is putting out something like 20 mW. The 60 mile thing has to be something that was lost in translation. I call BS.

      There is no specs g

    • All right. Trying to find something with a similar power that does somewhat the same thing. Take a look at this:

      https://www.cooking-hacks.com/... [cooking-hacks.com]

      25 mW transmitter, getting 1.6 miles urban and 13 miles clear LOS real world testing. This sounds much closer to what you would really get out of the Sony device.

  • Ok, I will bite. The headline should read "Sony Builds IoT Chip With a 100 km Range" because Sony is a Japanese company and that is what it actually says on the original website. Looks like someone at Engadget decided to remove 4 km to make it readable in the USA.

    I used to like Sony before they became a media company and let the media team destroy the feature set of the electronics team's products. They do have a habit of going down their own path sometimes instead of following the industry trend and
  • At that frequency you're limited to line of sight distances. So the only way the range indicated happens is in the vacuum of space or with an extremely high tower. And in the latter case that kind of range isn't particularly special

"What man has done, man can aspire to do." -- Jerry Pournelle, about space flight

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