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A Simple Explanation Of ‘The Internet Of Things’

September 12, 2016 by Sameer Pradhan Leave a Comment

IoTThe “Internet of things” (IoT) is becoming an increasingly growing topic of conversation both in the workplace and outside of it. It’s a concept that not only has the potential to impact how we live but also how we work. But what exactly is the “Internet of things” and what impact is it going to have on you, if any? There are a lot of complexities around the “Internet of things” but I want to stick to the basics. Lots of technical and policy-related conversations are being had but many people are still just trying to grasp the foundation of what the heck these conversations are about.

Let’s start with understanding a few things.

Broadband Internet is become more widely available, the cost of connecting is decreasing, more devices are being created with Wi-Fi capabilities and sensors built into them, technology costs are going down, and smartphone penetration is sky-rocketing. All of these things are creating a “perfect storm” for the IoT.

So What Is The Internet Of Things?

Simply put, this is the concept of basically connecting any device with an on and off switch to the Internet (and/or to each other). This includes everything from cellphones, coffee makers, washing machines, headphones, lamps, wearable devices and almost anything else you can think of. This also applies to components of machines, for example a jet engine of an airplane or the drill of an oil rig. As I mentioned, if it has an on and off switch then chances are it can be a part of the IoT. The analyst firm Gartner says that by 2020 there will be over 26 billion connected devices… That’s a lot of connections (some even estimate this number to be much higher, over 100 billion). The IoT is a giant network of connected “things” (which also includes people). The relationship will be between people-people, people-things, and things-things.

How Does This Impact You?

The new rule for the future is going to be, “Anything that can be connected, will be connected.” But why on earth would you want so many connected devices talking to each other? There are many examples for what this might look like or what the potential value might be. Say for example you are on your way to a meeting; your car could have access to your calendar and already know the best route to take. If the traffic is heavy your car might send a text to the other party notifying them that you will be late. What if your alarm clock wakes up you at 6 a.m. and then notifies your coffee maker to start brewing coffee for you? What if your office equipment knew when it was running low on supplies and automatically re-ordered more? What if the wearable device you used in the workplace could tell you when and where you were most active and productive and shared that information with other devices that you used while working?

On a broader scale, the IoT can be applied to things like transportation networks: “smart cities” which can help us reduce waste and improve efficiency for things such as energy use; thus helping us understand and improve how we work and live. Take a look at the visual below to see what something like that can look like.

libelium_smart_world_infographic_big

The reality is that the IoT allows for virtually endless opportunities and connections to take place, many of which we can’t even think of or fully understand the impact of today. It’s not hard to see how and why the IoT is such a hot topic today; it certainly opens the door to a lot of opportunities but also to many challenges. Security is a big issue that is oftentimes brought up. With billions of devices being connected together, what can people do to make sure that their information stays secure? Will someone be able to hack into your toaster and thereby get access to your entire network? The IoT also opens up companies all over the world to more security threats. Then we have the issue of privacy and data sharing. This is a hot-button topic even today, so one can only imagine how the conversation and concerns will escalate when we are talking about many billions of devices being connected. Another issue that many companies specifically are going to be faced with is around the massive amounts of data that all of these devices are going to produce. Companies need to figure out a way to store, track, analyze and make sense of the vast amounts of data that will be generated.

So what now?

Conversations about the IoT are (and have been for several years) taking place all over the world as we seek to understand how this will impact our lives. We are also trying to understand what the many opportunities and challenges are going to be as more and more devices start to join the IoT. For now the best thing that we can do is educate ourselves about what the IoT is and the potential impacts that can be seen on how we work and live.

Article courtesy: Jacob Morgan, a keynote speaker, author (most recently of The Future of Work), and futurist.

Filed Under: Internet of Things (IoT), z2 Tagged With: Internet of things, IoT

2nd Smart Cities India 2016 Expo coming up at Pragati Maidan, New Delhi, from 11th to 13th May 2016

May 7, 2016 by Sameer Pradhan Leave a Comment

Smart Water and Waste Management
Water
• Annual per capita water availability is expected to decline to 1,140 cubic meters by 2050, from 1,545 cubic meters in 2011. Need to adopt sustainable water management practices
• Water related diseases are a primary cause of deaths in India, with around 38 million Indians affected by waterborne diseases annually
• Rainfall water, if harvested, is usable for drinking or irrigation
• Integrated Ganga Conservation Mission called “Namami Gange” to restore the river: INR 2,100 crores (US$ 339 million) allocated for FY 2015-16
Products on display:
Analytical instruments
Bathroom fittings and accessories
Filtration systems
Pipes and fittings
Pumps and motors
Water chemicals
Water harvesting
Water purification products and systems
Water pollution monitoring systems, etc.
Waste & solid waste
• Waste disposal and sewage treatment plants are missing in most Indian cities
Around 60 million tonnes of municipal solid waste (MSW) is generated in urban India annually. With rapid urbanization and changing lifestyle and food habits, the amount of municipal solid waste will increase significantly
• E-Waste (obsolete, discarded, broken and surplus electrical and electronic devices) is of immediate and long term concern as the industry is unregulated and recycling can lead to major environmental degradation posing a major threat to human health
Products on display:
• Battery recycling
• Bio-medical waste management
• E-waste recycling machinery
• Hazardous waste management
• Machinery and equipment
• Recycling systems and technologies
• Waste storage containers
• Waste transport vehicles
• Waste treatment and recycling
• Waste-to-energy equipment, etc.
Sanitation
• Swachh Bharat Abhiyan or the “Clean India Mission” is India’s biggest cleanliness campaign that aims to accomplish the vision of “Clean India” by 2 October 2019 to coincide with Mahatma Gandhi’s 150th birth anniversary at an expected cost of INR 62,000 crore (US$ 10 billion)
• Roughly half the Indian population (around 594 million people) defecate in the open. The government has plans for an indoor toilet in every Indian home
• More than 38 billion litres of sewage is generated in urban India annually. Most of the untreated sewage is discharged into rivers, ponds or lakes, which is the main source of municipal water
Products on display:
• Bathroom cleaners
• Effluent treatment plants
• Lavatories
• Odor eliminators
• Sanitizers and disinfectants
• Sewage & sludge treatment, etc.
Clean Energy
• About 400 million people in India lack access to electricity: the government has promised electricity for every household by 2019
• The Indian power sector is expected to attract investment of US$ 250 billion by 2019 across diverse areas of the energy sector
• India has an installed capacity of 267 Gigawatt (GW) as of March 2015, dominated by fossil fuels: the additional electricity demand creates a large opportunity for renewable energy sources
• India’s target to install 100 GW solar power capacity by 2022 could make it one of the largest solar power markets in the world, creating 10 lakhs (1 million) jobs
• India to spend US$ 21.6 billion over the next 10 years on smart grid infrastructure
• 14 smart grid pilot projects to be implemented by state-owned distribution utilities in India
• Investment of around INR 25,300 crore (US$ 4 billion) to roll out a new metering system and upgrade distribution networks in the country
• Indian LED industry set to touch INR 21,600 cr (US$ 3.48 billion) by 2020
Products on display:
• Batteries / Invertors / UPS
• Combined heat and power (CHP)
• Energy saving devices
• Energy storage
• Led lights
• Rooftop solar systems
• Smart grid
• Smart meters
• Solar heaters
• Street lighting
• Thermostats
• Voltage regulators, etc.
Smart Transportation
• The electric and hybrid vehicle industry in India is virtually non-existent. A shift to electric mobility is essential to counter depletion of fossil fuels, increase in fuel costs, and impact of transportation on the environment
• Government to spend INR 1,400 crore (US$ 226 million) over the next two years on incentives and subsidies for makers and buyers of electric vehicles as part of an effort to have at least six million electric vehicles on Indian roads by 2020
• Plans to convert 101 river stretches to transport goods and passengers through cheaper and environment-friendly National Waterways. 1,000 new barges will provide direct employment to 20,000 people
• Delhi to be the first city in India to install intelligent traffic lighting systems
• The use of bio-fuels being encouraged with an ethanol-blending program to curb India’s oil imports
• Road accidents in developing countries have declined even as vehicle sales have risen; while Indian fatalities have soared by 50 percent in the last decade
• India needs stringent norms to curb vehicular pollution
Products on display:
• Advance driver assistance systems
• Advance safety control systems
• Air pollution control devices
• Autonomous vehicle
• Barges
• Battery manufacturing
• Battery technology
• Biofuels
• Bus surveillance
• Charging stations
• City traffic surveillance
• Electric vehicles
• Emission monitoring systems
• Hybrid Vehicles
• Hydrogen fuel cells
• Intelligent traffic lighting system
• LPG / LNG
• Metros
• Navigation devices
• Urban transport systems
• Vehicle tracking system, etc.
Smart IT & Communications
• India’s share of the global IT industry at 7 percent is largely owing to exports
• Government of India targets Internet of things (IOT) industry at US$ 15 billion by 2020
• Indian business process management (BPM) market is expected to reach US$ 50 billion by 2020
• Digital India mission to transform India into a digitally empowered society and knowledge economy by 2018
• 4G services likely to have 15 million subscribers by December 2015
• Sensors market in India is one of the fastest growing in Asia-Pacific, and expected to grow at a CAGR of over 20 percent between 2015-20
• India, the fourth largest base for young businesses in the world, with 3,000 tech start-ups, is estimated to be 11,500 by 2020 (Nasscom and Zinnov Management Consulting Pvt Ltd.)
• Some Indian cities have announced citywide wireless networks with time limits of free usage by consumers
• India is the world’s second-largest tele-communications market with over 990+ million subscribers
Products on display:
• E-Governance
• Big data
• Cloud computing
• Data security and management
• Firewalls and protection
• Geographic Information System (GIS)
• Internet of Things (IoT)
• Location-based services
• Mobile apps
• Mobile devices
• Mobile marketing
• M-payment
• Sensors
• Smart Cards
• Smart devices (Routers / Modems, etc.)
• Telcos
• Wireless technologies / products, etc.
Smart Buildings
• Plan to build 60 million homes – 40 million in rural areas, and 20 million in urban areas – under the “Housing for All” by 2022. INR 22,407 crore (US$ 3.61 billion) allocated for FY 2015-16
• More than 3,124 green building projects, with a footprint of over 2.75 billion sq. ft. registered with the Indian Green Building Council (IGBC), of which 617 green building projects are certified and functional
• Automation technologies to play a key role in the efficient operations of buildings. The industry estimates the Indian building automation and control systems market to grow three fold in revenue terms by 2019
• Smart monitoring, cross-device compatibility, voice commands, wireless connectivity, lighting enabled by motion sensors are a few features of smart homes
Products on display:
• Smart heating
• Smart cooling
• Combined heat and power
• Water heating systems
• Building automation systems and products
• Smart home devices
• Elevators / Escalators / Autowalks
• Smart appliances
• Smart living solutions
• Building efficiency systems
• Green building devices
• Smart city project developers, etc.
Smart Education
• India needs to improve elementary education to move ahead in the digital era, and citizens need to adapt to change
• Prime Minister Modi launched “Skill India” to provide training and skill development for 500 million Indian youth by 2020
• Indian government to frame new education policy to provide maximum and easy access to better education to all sections of society
• India’s online education market is expected to be US$ 40 billion by 2017. The demand for online education learning in the K-12 segment, and advancements in technology to support this new way of education
Products on display:
• Classroom latest technologies
• Educational games and gadgets
• Educational institutions
• E-learning appliances and products
• Interactive white boards
• Laboratory / training equipment
• Teaching systems, etc.
Smart Health
• The Indian hospital and healthcare industry has potential to be a global hub for healthcare services. An increasing number of global players are focusing on the Indian market to provide efficient, and latest technology in healthcare delivery
• The Indian medical tourism industry is expected to reach INR 36,000 crore (US$ 5.80 billion) by 2018. India is placed among the top three medical tourism destinations in Asia due to the low cost of treatment, quality healthcare infrastructure and availability of highly-skilled doctors
• With 360 million policies, India’s life insurance sector is the largest in the world. The insurance industry has potential to reach USD 1 trillion by 2020
• Two villages in Jaipur district will be developed as “Health Smart Villages” under which data will be collected and computerised to manage the health scenario of the places
Products on display:
• Ambulance
• Healthcare institutions
• Hospital equipment and furniture
• Insurance companies
• Medical devices and diagnostics products, etc.
Smart Security and Safety
• The Indian electronic security market to reach US$ 2.31 billion by 2018
• It is estimated that India will invest INR 550 billion (US$ 8.8 billion) in the private security industry by 2016
• India’s homeland security market is expected to be worth US$ 16 billion by 2018
• India’s fire and safety equipment market is expected to reach US$ 4.3 billion by the end of 2017
Products on display:
• Access control
• Barriers / Turnstiles / Bollards
• Biometrics
• Burglar / fire alarm systems
• CCTV / Video surveillance devices
• Detection control devices
• Personnel safety equipment
• Screening and scanning equipment
• Security systems
• Tracking systems
• Under vehicle inspection, etc.
Smart Urban Planning
• Plans to build pedestrian skywalks, walkways, cycle tracks, etc. in Indian cities
• The government has launched Saansad Adarsh Gram Yojana (SAGY) to develop 2,500 of the 6 lakh (0.6 million) villages across the nation
• Construction of high speed railways in India. The Mumbai-Ahmedabad high-speed rail corridor to connect the two cities
• Government plans to develop 200 low-cost airports in Tier-II and Tier-III towns across the country
• The amusement park industry estimated to reach INR 4,000 crore (US$ 645million) by 2020
Products on display:
• Airport surveillance and equipment
• Geospatial technologies
• High speed rail
• Infrastructure developers
• Landscaping and park furnishings
• Nano rail
• Playground equipment
• Sports and athletic equipment
• Theme parks / amusement park products, etc.
Disaster Management
• The Indian subcontinent is amongst the world’s high disaster prone areas
• Almost 85 percent of India’s area is vulnerable to one or multiple hazards
• Around 60 percent of the land is vulnerable to earthquake (high-risk seismic zones), 68 percent to drought, 8 percent to cyclones, and 12 percent to floods
Products on display:
• Camp / Logistic equipment
• Emergency response equipment
• Explosive detection
• Firefighting equipment
• First-aid products
• Medical and evacuation equipment
• NBC (Nuclear, Biological, Chemical)
detection equipment
• Night vision devices
• Radio communication systems
• Test and measurement instruments, etc.
Smart Manufacturing
• “Make in India” is an initiative to encourage companies to manufacture in India, create jobs, make India self-reliant, and to attract foreign investment
• Government of India to launch “Zero Defect, Zero Effect” to manufacture high quality products without impacting the environment. This will focus on using clean technology
• Ministry of Micro Small and Medium Enterprises (MSME) to implement schemes to benefit local manufacturing across the country. India has close to 35 million MSMEs
• Government of India plan to launch food processing and textile parks in the coming years
Products on display:
• Advance machineries
• Industrial safety equipment
• New technologies
• Quality monitoring systems
• Remote monitoring devices
• Robotics, etc.
Others
Other products on display:

• Composites
• Financial institutions
• Insurance companies
• Laboratory equipment
• R&D
• Turnkey solution providers, etc.

All lists of products on display are indicative and not exhaustive

Courtesy: smartcitiesindia

Filed Under: Building Automation, Featured, Smart Cities India, Smart Cities India 2016 Expo Tagged With: big data, IoT, Smart Buildings, Smart Cities

Ken Sinclair’s April 2016 Automated Buildings Theme is “IoT Disruption Transforms and Opens Industry”

April 1, 2016 by Ken Smyers Leave a Comment

Ken_Sinclair_Photo In his April 2016 Automated Buildings edition, Ken Sinclair, AB owner and editor, references the steady march of technical advances that have impacted our industry over the past 40 years to highlight his April theme “IoT Disruption Transforms and Opens Industry,” emphasizing that we must stay actively involved in the IT technologies because the next leg of the journey has just begun. Ken Sinclair: “Transforming and Opening the Industry is a journey, not a destination, and will require consistent and constant attention. Our contributing editor Therese has described our April issue as something about open source being a friction-reducer mixed into the IoT/Smart Building super collider,……very descriptive for sure.

Especially the IoT/Smart Building super collider. This is so much like the DDC revolution in the 1980s, Opening to BACnet movement in 1990s, going online with Open Internet in the 2000s, sticking our heads in the clouds in 2010s. Now the data is moving to the edge coupled with open source cloud thinking which is Transforming and Opening our Industry.”

Click here for the complete editorial.

April Articles

IoT Uprising or IoT Revolution? Dr. Michael Georgescu, Ecorithm

Open, What Does It Really Mean? Fred Gordy, Intelligent Buildings LLC.

Open Source is the New Marketing, Therese Sullivan, BuildingContext Ltd

ControlTrends India, Sameer Pradhan, ControlTrends India

A Need to Refine Business, Allan McHale, Memoori

Systems Integrators, Louis-Nicolas Hamer, Soljit

The Extinction of the Craftsman, Todd A. Finnegan, ACS Services, LLC

Constructing Construction Specifications, Jim Sinopoli, Smart Buildings LLC

Filed Under: Automated Buildings, Building Automation, Ken Sinclair, z2 Tagged With: Automated Buildings, HVAC Industry, IoT, Ken Sinclair

IoT Connecting Rural and Urban India

March 29, 2016 by Sameer Pradhan Leave a Comment

Investors and companies are of the opinion that Internet of Things (IoT) can bring a real revolution to India by empowering millions in rural areas and connecting “humans” to the mainstream.

According to Oracle India Managing Director Shailender Kumar “It is a surefire way of channeling the benefits of a digital economy to the largest part of the country. IoT will enable delivery of education, health, governance and financial services to otherwise underserved areas”

The IoT industrial revolution or “industry 4.0” in a well-connected India is the first step towards a well-served nation and will provide the much-needed bridge between urban and rural India.

For example, most patients in rural areas do not have access to specialists. Thus, several large hospitals in the metros are beginning to offer remote consulting services in rural villages using media-rich network capabilities.

“The doctors can see and interact with patients in remote telemedicine centres, with the case history and medical data automatically transmitted to the doctor for analysis. Similarly, the IoT technology can be leveraged to offer high-quality remote education in high schools across the country,” Shailendra Kumar told IANS.
The IoT connectivity also offers a host of development opportunities to untapped areas, including manufacturing and e-commerce to market local and traditional products.

“A host of ‘localisation’ technologies can help different regions to communicate; so language is not a barrier. Relevant information and updates can be provided in local languages and scripts,” the Oracle executive added.

According to K.S. Viswanathan, vice president (industrial initiative) at apex IT body Nasscom (National Association of Software and Services Companies), as IoT emerges as the next big thing to become a $300 billion (roughly Rs. 22,41,307 crores) global industry by 2020, India is all set to capture at least 20 percent market share in the next five years.

“The IoT is dramatically alerting manufacturing, energy, transportation, medical and other industrial sectors worldwide,” said Viswanathan while launching the “Nasscom IoT Centre of Excellence” in Coimbatore last week.

Andhra Pradesh has taken a lead when it comes to leveraging the IoT potential in the country. The state government has approved the first-of-its-kind IoT policy with an aim to turn the state into an IoT hub by 2020 and tap 10 percent market share in the country.

“We will develop state-of-the-art IoT infrastructure that matches global standards to grab an Indian market share of $1.5 billion (roughly Rs. 11,205 crores) by 2020,” said state IT minister Palle Raghunatha Reddy as the Centre is currently drafting an ambitious policy to create an Indian IoT industry worth $15 billion (roughly Rs. 1,12,051 crores) by 2020.

On the global consumer front, Gartner has forecast that 6.4 billion connected things will be in use worldwide in 2016 – up 30 percent from 2015 – and will reach 20.8 billion by 2020.

As you traverse through these mind-boggling IoT numbers, where does India stand?

“We see that India will have a significant growth in IoT connections in the next four-five years,” said Mats Lundquist, chief executive officer at Telenor Connexion, Sweden-based leading enabler of connected business solutions.

Industry numbers indicate that manufacturing will be one of the main IoT drivers in the Asia Pacific (APAC) market and will be the biggest sector in IoT spending.

According to a report from global market research firm Frost & Sullivan, manufacturing contributed 30 percent of the IoT spending in 2014 and it is expected to rise up to 32 percent of total spending in the APAC region by 2020 which equates nearly $79 billion (roughly Rs. 5,90,137 crores).

“Being an emerging market, India has a big potential owing to several initiatives like “Digital India” and “Smart Cities”. The next big market (for connected devices) in the world is south Asia and India holds a good position,” Apalak Ghosh, principal consultant at market research and consulting firm CyberMedia Research (CMR), told IANS.

“Eventually, south Asia will contribute to about 30-40 percent of the total connected things,” Ghosh added.

So where will the real revenue come from – the consumer or the enterprise sector?

“The Digital India initiative has created a strategic roadmap to build and strengthen domain competency and place India on the global IoT map. We believe that the enterprise sector will bolster IoT revenues,” elaborated Deep Agarwal, regional sales director (India) of US-based Zebra Technologies that builds tracking technology and solutions.

“To begin with, the revenue will first come from the enterprise sector. As the technology booms, the revenue will start coming from the consumer sector,” Ghosh added.

Since IoT is a concept of devices talking to one another, there is a lot of data transfer happening which is vulnerable to cyber threats as well.

“The cloud can work as a catalyst to make IoT work and for that, there has to be a right kind of framework that can assist it. The GRC (governance, risk management and compliance) guidelines can play an important part to make IoT work in a proper manner,” Ghosh said.

India is currently a small IoT market but with great potential. “We will definitely see a great development in the country on the IoT front in the coming years,” Lundquist pointed out.

For Oracle’s Shailendra Kumar, rural India is set to transform itself by taking the technology leap and adopting real-life solutions like IoT.

Source: NDTV

Filed Under: Featured, Internet of Things (IoT) Tagged With: Internet of things, IoT, IoT India, Rural India, Urban India

Lynxspring, Inc. Reaches Out to India, Announces Partnership with CICC Automation Technologies Pvt. Ltd.

February 17, 2016 by Sameer Pradhan 2 Comments

PRESS RELEASE

CICC Automation Technologies Pvt. Ltd.  Appointed Lynxspring Business Partner in India

Partnership extends Lynxspring’s enabling technologies in building automation, energy management and IoT to meet new opportunities within India and the Middle East

Lee’s Summit, MO and Mumbai, India — February 16, 2016 — Lynxspring, Inc. ( www.lynxspring.com ), a premier developer and provider of open, IP-based control solutions for intelligent buildings, energy management, cyber protection and device-to-enterprise integration, today announced the appointment of CICC Automation Technologies Pvt. Ltd, as a Lynxspring Business Partner (LBP). The partnership extends Lynxspring’s enabling technologies in building automation, energy management and IoT to meet new opportunities provided by the infrastructure sector within India and the Middle East markets.

As a Lynxspring Business Partner, CICC Automation Technologies will distribute and offer a full line of Lynxspring products, solutions, services and support. This includes Lynxspring’s JENEsys® Building Operating System, powered by the Niagara Framework®, an open, unified operating system specifically designed for commercial facilities that combine connectivity, integration and interoperability, supervision and control, energy management, visualization and actionable information (data & analytics) into a single architecture within a cyber-secured environment.  Deployed globally in thousands of facilities including office buildings, government, and military bases, hotels, manufacturing plants, hospitals, retail, and schools/universities, the JENEsys® Building Operating System allows facility management organizations to continually build off the same network deployments and add additional applications as desired.

In addition, CICC Automation Technologies will have access to Lynxspring’s new Onyxx® Edge-to-Enterprise and IoT portfolio of bridges, gateways, appliances, modules, drivers and applications.

“We are pleased to have established this agreement with CICC. This announcement signals the start of an exciting time,” said Terry Swope, President and CEO of Lynxspring. “We are delighted to partner with CICC Automation Technologies and have been impressed with their professionalism, technical capabilities and drive for innovation. CICC has the expertise, reputation, the reach and the commitment to deliver in this market and together we look forward to making a positive impact on driving solutions that manage and operate facilities and equipment smarter, safer, securely, more efficiently, and at peak performance levels.”

CICC Automation Technologies, headquartered in Mumbai, India and with offices in the UAE and USA, is a master systems integrator and turnkey contractor offering solutions and services for today’s intelligent buildings and smart cities. CICC’s team of engineering and technology professionals use collective industry expertise to specify requirements, confirm business benefits and deliver on time and on budget projects. The company’s proven approach to project management, engineering, installation, commissioning and maintenance delivers multiple business benefits, reduces risk of failure and maximizes results.

“We are thrilled about this appointment and partnership.  The combination of Lynxspring’s products and solutions with CICC Automation’s expertise and deployment capabilities shows our strong commitment to the market by offering full system solutions from world renowned brands backed up with inventory, training and product support for our customers that meet today’s facility operational challenges,” said  Sameer Pradhan, Managing Director, CICC Automation Technologies. “Lynxspring and CICC ‘s synergy offers genuine benefit for our customers and the market in India.”

“CICC has earned a reputation for providing independent advice, the very best quality of product, professional service, and technical support to meet the demands of their customers,” added Marc Petock, Lynxspring’s Vice President of Marketing. “We are delighted to be working with such an innovative and experienced team who is ideally placed to service an exciting and growing market in which they are widely recognized. We are very pleased with the opportunity presented with CICC and look forward to a long and fruitful partnership.”

CICC Automation Technologies will be exhibiting in Hall #5, Stall M-20 at ACREX India 2016, February 25-27 in the Bombay Convention and Exhibition Centre (BCEC), Mumbai, India.

About Lynxspring, Inc.

Based in Lee’s Summit, Missouri and founded in 2002, Lynxspring is changing the way devices, systems, and people communicate and collaborate across enterprises and out to the edge The Internet of Things is changing our world and with it, our technologies. It is changing the way we manufacture, design, develop and deliver cyber security and building control systems, equipment, devices and applications—creating a world for the Intelligence of Things.

Embracing open, interoperable platforms, Lynxspring designs, manufactures and distributes JENEsys®, JENEsysONE™, LYNX CyberPRO™, Helixx™ and Onyxx™ brands of Internet-based automation and cyber security technology and edge-to-enterprise solutions for Building Automation, Energy Management, Cyber Threat and Security Protection, Equipment Control and other Specialty applications. Lynxspring’s technologies support open, multi-vendor interoperability that simplifies the automation and information architecture across the entire enterprise and significantly lowers automation and information infrastructure costs. More information is available at www.lynxspring.com.

About CICC Automation Technologies Pvt. Ltd.

Based in Mumbai, India, CICC is a unique systems integrator and turnkey contractor offering out-of-the-box solutions in Integrated Building Management Systems. CICC’s competent teams of engineering professionals use collective industry expertise to specify requirements, confirm business benefits and deliver on-time and on-budget projects. This proven approach to project management quantifies business benefits, reduces risk of failure and maximizes business results. More information is available at www.ciccautomation.com. CICC is also the producer of ControlTrends India (www.controltrends.in) and Sameer Pradhan serves as Director of ControlTrends India.

Media Contact:

Marc Petock
Vice President, Marketing
Lynxspring, Inc.
marc.petock@lynxspring.com
+1 (816) 347-3500

Filed Under: Building Automation, Lynxspring Tagged With: CICC Automation, Cyber security, Edge-to-Enterprise, IoT, JACE 8000, Lynxspring, Niagara, Niagara Framework India, Tridium

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