IoT In Protocol War, Says Startup

CTO Of Enlightened says outlook for Zigbee is particularly dim.

Rick Merritt, SiliconValley Bureau Chief, EE Times

December 30, 2014

1 Min Read

There's no clear end in sight for the protocol wars in the Internet of Things, according to Tanuj Mohan, co-founder and CTO of building controls startup Enlighted, which developed its own 802.15.4 protocols.

Mohan, a networking expert who worked at Cisco, Novell, and Tropos and built multiprotocol routers at Hughes, believes the outlook for Zigbee is particularly dim. The IoT, he said, needs a set of open APIs and protocols that work with a variety of physical-layer networks. In this way, IoT networks should act more like IT nets.

"Anyone who tries to build a physical layer and drive a software stack based on it all the way up to the application layer is a fool," he continued. "The IP and network layer should have nothing to do with the media. The last-mile protocols have some play, but they are not as important as people make them out to be. It doesn't matter if[nodes] talk over one protocol or another. In any case, you will need mediation devices.

"Today Zigbee is the most cost-effective, but tomorrow WiFi will figure it out. Networks talk SNMP or CORBA -- every few years there's a new management protocol," Mohan said. "In some sense, that's what will happen in IoT -- it will keep moving, and people will need open APIs.

Mohan criticized the 250-kbit/s Zigbee standard as too slow and complicated for use in building automation. "You don't want the network to be the bottleneck, and Zigbee is one of the slowest of any protocols I know. "

Read the rest of this article on EE Times.

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About the Author(s)

Rick Merritt

SiliconValley Bureau Chief, EE Times

Based in San Jose, Rick writes news and analysis about the electronics industry and the engineering profession for EE Times. He is the editor of the Android, Internet of Things, Wireless/Networking, and Medical Designlines. He joined EE Times in 1992 as a Hong Kong based reporter and has served as editor in chief of EE Times and OEM Magazine.

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