Bangkok--29 Nov--IDC Research
On December 15th 2016, IDC Asia/Pacific will unveil the new trends on the Internet of Things (IoT) across the Asian region at the IoT Summit 2016 at The Okura Prestige, Bangkok, Thailand. The summit will feature ground-breaking research from International Data Corporation (IDC) on the IoT phenomenon, insights from leaders on the use of IoT in different industries, and a great opportunity to learn from and network with your peers. IDC and its partners will also feature an experience centre for various IoT features of vertical industries such as Connected Car, NB-IoT, and Connected Home.
IDC believes that the year 2017 is an opportune time to develop a roadmap for alliance-building in IoT. A well-thought-out plan will lead to a reduced cost of ownership of IoT technologies and enable continuous agility and innovation. "Process automation, increased productivity and cost reduction are the top benefits of an IoT solution. This highlights an internal and operational focus by organizations over the short term when opportunities to enhance customer experience are becoming increasingly important," says, Hugh Ujhazy, Associate Vice President of IoT, IDC Asia/Pasific.
IDC forecasts the IoT market in APeJ will reach $381 billion in 2017. "Manufacturers' investment trends and use cases in both enterprise and consumer sectors will vary depending on the adoption rate of the technologies. This is also driven by different business structures and various scenarios in industry regulations and innovation levels," says Weeradej Panichwisai, Research Manager, Telecoms IDC's Asia/Pacific
In this summit, IDC will also examine the current state of the IoT market in Asia/Pacific including the following:
What's Hot - Technologies, solutions, and strategies that are driving the IoT industry in Asia/Pacific including IoT security, low power WANs, the drive toward building analytics at the edge and the adoption of these technologies by vertical industries. Below the surface innovation - leading IoT solution deployments, including manufacturing operations, foreign monitoring and asset management tend to focus on areas that drive operational excellence, including streamlining business processes and reducing costs. These solutions, though valuable, are not easily visible to consumers or citizens.
What's Not - Technologies, solutions, and strategies that are getting attention from consumers, governments, and enterprise but fail to deliver on their promise. This includes the delivery of some smart city use cases, the deployment of wearables in consumer and enterprise use cases and the application of conventional thinking to IoT solutions.
What's Next - Technologies, solutions, and strategies everyone will be talking about in 2017 including IoT at the edge, analytics and the increasing importance of DevOps enabling solutions to IoT.
For more information about this event, please visit here or contact Sasithorn
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