IoT Blog

Find various topics on the Internet of Things and the wider industry in our IoT Blog. Read exciting articles about 1NCE, the current mobile standards or M2M. 1NCE’s IoT Blog features the 1NCE team. Market analysis and assessment of the IoT market by the founders and the 1NCE team compact and simple. The newsletter, for which you can easily register, also keeps you up to date and offers interesting topics.

1NCE IoT Blog

# News | 21.03.2025

SGP.31/.32: New GSMA Standards for Massive Deployments

As the number of devices connected to the internet, like sensors and trackers, is growing, common standards are also changing. The initial communication standards didn't intend to handle the sheer number and variety of these 'Internet of Things' (IoT) devices.

# News | 13.03.2025

How the End of 2G and 3G Affects the Safety of French Smart Elevators?

The French Elevator Federation estimates that 290,000 systems, accounting for half of the country's existing elevator systems, will need to migrate to 4G or 5G by 2029. This presents an unprecedented challenge for the industry. 

# News | 13.02.2025

AIoT: Beyond the Hype, What's the Reality?

AIoT is booming - hailed as the next revolution in connected devices. But is it always necessary? At 1NCE, we focus on real-world business impact rather than hype.

# News | 28.01.2025

IoT Fall or Market Maturity? Insights on IoT Market Consolidation

The Internet of Things (IoT) industry has become oversaturated with the industry players in recent years. As a result, there's a very natural process of gradual market consolidation.

Next Generation Cellular IoT Connectivity: eSIM vs iSIM explained

The traditional SIM card, the physical chip that must be inserted into a mobile device, is also used in IoT devices. However, as new IoT use cases arise, the limitations of the physical IoT SIM mean newer forms of SIM, such as IoT eSIM and IoT iSIM will become prominent. We explain the differences.

Lean protocols for the IoT: MQTT, CoAP and LwM2M

MQTT, CoAP and LwM2M: An important factor for the energy consumption of an IoT device is the volume of data that is transmitted with each communication. The more data, the longer the device must remain active and the greater the power consumption. Choosing the right communication protocol can save a lot of energy.

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