Comsol Looks to Cisco, NIL for Smart City, Intelligent Farming Solutions

Comsol Looks to Cisco, NIL for Smart City, Intelligent Farming Solutions

South Africa’s Comsol has announced a new partnership With Cisco and Nil, which is aimed at accelerating the adoption of IoT-enabled devices and networks with applications such as ‘intelligent farming’ and Smart City technologies.

The partnership will enable Comsol to accelerate the build out of their Low Power Wide Area Network (LPWAN) and offer long-distance wireless connectivity for battery-powered IoT devices.

Comsol will add Cisco gateways utilizing LoRa technology to expand its network.

The South African-based firm said Cisco’s LoRaWAN compliant solution connects IoT devices and sensors across cities or rural areas at low cost and with low power consumption, allowing battery operated sensors to last as long as 10 years.

The architecture provides a standards-based IoT network at scale, enabling a host of business models for the LoRaWAN ecosystem without the need for significant investment, it added.

“The Cisco gateway architecture increases the resilience and security of our LoRa network. As we see rapid adoption of IoT services globally, security and uptime are becoming more critical. The partnership allows us to offer our clients a best of breed architecture backed by Cisco with support from NIL,” says Greg Montjoie, IoT COO at Comsol.

The network also provides a comprehensive geolocation and tracking solution, offering network-based location capabilities enabled by Cisco LoRaWAN network gateways and infrastructure.

IoT services and applications that will benefit from this technology include asset tracking, smart parking, smart lighting, waste management, water and gas metering, irrigation management, intelligent buildings and many other uses.

“The LoRa ecosystem is rapidly expanding and evolving. Therefore, from a security perspective, it is critical that resilience is built in so that updates are quickly pushed to the network,” adds Clayton Naidoo, acting general manager at Cisco South Africa.

According to SNS research, by 2025, almost half of Internet of Things Machine to Machine (M2M) wide-area connections will make use of LPWAN technologies. These offer ease of connection and simple backend infrastructure, wide coverage, low power consumption, and low cost.

Article Source: https://talkiot.co.za

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