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©1999-2003 OSGi Alliance, All Rights Reserved
The Home Network Market - Current Status and Solutions
Susan Schwarze, Ph.D.VP Marketing, OSGi Alliance
ProSyst SoftwareDürener Straße 40550858 Cologne, Germany+49-221- 6604-411s.schwarze@prosyst.com
©1999-2003 OSGi Alliance, All Rights Reserved
Agenda
• Current Requirements for the Networked Home
• Overview Home Standards
• Overview Home Networking Choices
• OSGi Alliance as Integration Platform
• Benefits of the OSGi Alliance
• Summary and Key Contacts
• OSGi Invitations
©1999-2003 OSGi Alliance, All Rights Reserved
Distribution of Broadband
©1999-2003 OSGi Alliance, All Rights Reserved
Market Trends
• 117 million broadband homes worldwide by 2005– 75% will have home networks *
– PCs first, STB and media devices next•
– Explosive growth of networking devices, especially for the segments data and entertainment networks°
– 2003: More than 25% of US-broadband homes have home networks (2008: 44%). �
– By 2005: 20% of the European households being equipped with a network.°
– Consumers consider the current network of computers and various consumer electronics too difficult and expensive.X • MorganStanley
* DSL ForumForrester �Research° Data MonitorX Accenture
©1999-2003 OSGi Alliance, All Rights Reserved
The Korean Broadband Market
• South and East Asia have seen the most spectacular rate of growth during the second half of 2002
- The two biggest DSL countries are South Korea and the U.S.A.
- Subscribers are ready to pay for Internet content
• Online gaming (profitable)
• Visible growth of video-on-demand, virtual community clubs and other fee-based services
• The true obstacle is easy payment
• B2C web sites are profitable
- Korean subscribers pay through their mobile phone operator or ISP (partnership arrangements)
- Supplement by advertising revenueSource: DSLForum.org
©1999-2003 OSGi Alliance, All Rights Reserved
• Users- The distinction between what is in the box and what
is outside will blur: user will enjoy the combination- The flexible devices shall be able to manage new
applications when other functions will enter the home
• Device Manufacturers- Multiplicity of new devices will have (always on)
internet connection- A service platform enables lifetime cycle
management and renewable applications
• Service Providers- Each device will be a potential target for added
value service- The possibility to run a service on different target
appliance will boost the addressable market
The Emerging Product Scenario
©1999-2003 OSGi Alliance, All Rights Reserved
Benefits Home Automation
Device ConnectivityRemote Diagnosis and
Maintenance Shared Internet access
(50%)*Shared data and information
(45%)* Service Delivery on
command- Entertainment- Home Care - Remote security services - Energy saving options (special contracts/remote maintenance of the heating system)
No new wires (WiFi, HomePNA, + HomePlug)
* Yankee Group Home Networking 2002
Increasing Consumer Requirements Smart Home/Health Care
©1999-2003 OSGi Alliance, All Rights Reserved
CE Dilemma Between Horizontal and Vertical Markets
• Integration platform that fits the needs of operator driven and retail driven markets
• Support of multiple service providers on a common platform– Modularity– Tunable security mechanism– Decomposition of services
• Integration of different devices via plug&play
• Increasing demand for easy-to-handle technologies
• Ability to complement native code environment– Augment pure Java bundles with alternative payloads
such as markup languages, graphic images, native libraries
– Integration of existing software-components
©1999-2003 OSGi Alliance, All Rights Reserved
Agenda
• Current Requirements for the Networked Home
• Overview Home Standards
• Overview Home Networking Choices
• OSGi Alliance as Integration Platform
• Benefits of the OSGi Alliance
• Summary and Key Contacts
• OSGi Invitations
©1999-2003 OSGi Alliance, All Rights Reserved
CECED (AHAM) - www.ceced.org
White Control and Monitoring Application Interworking Specification (AIS)Abstraction layer for white control and monitoring applications
Specification of AIS:– Appliance functions and behavior
– Abstract installation process for white goods appliances (Driver- independent)
– Abstract message data structure (Information exchange)
– 1st step: specification of the mapping for the EHS protocol
– 2nd step: specification of the mapping for LONWORKS
©1999-2003 OSGi Alliance, All Rights Reserved
CECED: Targets and Benefits
Targets – White goods
– Home automation
Benefits– Special “Mapping to Protocol” specifications
enable interoperability with existing networks and bus systems
– Device independence (Cooperation of brands)
Main Disadvantage– Pure focus on White Goods so far
©1999-2003 OSGi Alliance, All Rights Reserved
European Home Control Networks: EHS/EIB
• Local bus protocols for controlling home appliances and
electrical devices (light switch, heating, white goods,…)
• EHS (European Home System):- Physical layer: powerline- Easy installation due to hot-plugging and self
configuration- Targets: white goods, home automation, low cost
• EIB (European Installation Bus):- Physical layer: twisted pair, powerline, radio - Network requires configuration by technical staff- Targets: professional building automation, home
automation
©1999-2003 OSGi Alliance, All Rights Reserved
European Home Control Networks: Konnex
• Local bus protocols for controlling home appliances and electrical devices (light switch, heating, white goods,…)
• Konnex - Compound of EHS, EIB, BatiBus - Defines three different but compatible protocols- Unifies all key features of the three bus systems - Targets: any control network applications
• Disadvantage- All three network protocols focus only on device control,
no service delivery- Regional Development – global interoperability difficulties
©1999-2003 OSGi Alliance, All Rights Reserved
LONWORKS® Device Networking Platform
• Local bus protocol for controlling home appliances and electrical devices (light switch, heating, white goods,…)
• Specification of– Low-level and high-level LONWORKS Protocols– Device Networking Platform
• Physical layer– ANSI/EIA709.2 power line signaling
• 5.4kbps data rate• Certified worldwide
– ANSI/EIA709.3 free-topology twisted pair signaling• 78kbps data rate• Certified worldwide
– IR, Coax, RF, Fiber also available
©1999-2003 OSGi Alliance, All Rights Reserved
LONWORKS® Benefits and Targets
• Targets– White goods– Lighting, Electrical Utility, Security, Access & other
home systems– All other automation applications
• Benefits– Widely supported networking specification– All media types supported including twisted pair,
power line, RF, IR, coax, and fiber optic– 30+ million installed devices for control & monitoring
• Main Disadvantage– Network requires configuration by technical staff– Restricted to Controlling, no Service Delivery– Driven by one company (Echelon with partners)
©1999-2003 OSGi Alliance, All Rights Reserved
Device Discovery and Control Protocol for IP networks in the home and SOHO
Main focus on TCP/IP-capable devices: PC-centric approach
Aim: Integration of home appliances by the use of the Simple Control Protocol (SCP – provided by Microsoft)
Specification– Discovery Mechanism
– Data Exchange Mechanism (no source code download)
– Device Control: Control Points (e.g. Server) versus Devices (“Container”)
– Device Control Protocols (interfaces and capabilities of devices)
– Presentation Layer
Universal Plug and Playwww.upnp.org
©1999-2003 OSGi Alliance, All Rights Reserved
• Targets• Data transmission network for devices via plug
and play functionality• Service Sharing
• Benefits• Widely supported networking specification• No device configuration, just Plug & Play• Small footprint software component on the
device• Independent of OS, language, or physical
connectivity
• Main Disadvantage• No focus on update and security mechanism
UPnP Benefits and Targets
©1999-2003 OSGi Alliance, All Rights Reserved
MHP Multimedia Home Platform www.mhp.org
• SW Platform Standard for the processing of entertainment and multimedia content
• Specification– Based on Digital Video Broadcasting (DVB) - same
system for Satellite, Cable, Terrestrial – The core is based on the platform DVB-J (includes a Sun
Microsystems’ Java Virtual Machine) – Java APIs provide interfaces between applications in the
JVM and the functions of the DVB receiver – Provides a set of transport protocols, a set of application
signaling protocol and a security model – 3 profiles - Enhanced TV, Interactive TV, Internet TV – Supports many kinds of applications, e.g.
• EPG / Information services / e-commerce / secure transactions
©1999-2003 OSGi Alliance, All Rights Reserved
• Targets – End-to-end chain for processing of
entertainment/multimedia content– TV Centric (e.g. MHP-STB)
• Benefits– Secure, Open, Scalable Platform (Java as underlying
technology)– Security Model - how to authenticate applications– Modular Platform: Open for Third Party Development– Platform-independent Content– European Content Processing Standard, increasing
worldwide acceptance
• Main Disadvantage– No Life-Cycle Management– Restricted to Entertainment and Multimedia Content
MHP Benefits and Targets
©1999-2003 OSGi Alliance, All Rights Reserved
Echonet www.echonet.gr.jp
• SW platform standard for home healthcare and home security
• Specification of– Common interfaces for different services provided by
Service Providers (e.g. Power Management Systems)– A communication protocol for a reliable low-cost
home network (no new wiring, installable in existing households)
– Communication middleware platform for device and application compatibility
– Development support tools and system models
©1999-2003 OSGi Alliance, All Rights Reserved
Echonet Benefits and Targets
• Targets – Comprehensive and systematic management of
energy consumption at the community and household levels
• Benefits – No rewiring necessary / implementation of a multi-
vendor environment– Easy development of applications / Plug & Play
functionality– Connection to wide-area networks
• Main Disadvantage– No focus on a common mechanism for
• Dynamic download • Life-cycle and remote management
©1999-2003 OSGi Alliance, All Rights Reserved
Agenda
• Current Requirements for the Networked Home
• Overview Home Standards
• Overview Home Networking Choices
• OSGi Alliance as Integration Platform
• Benefits of the OSGi Alliance
• Summary and Key Contacts
• OSGi Invitations
©1999-2003 OSGi Alliance, All Rights Reserved
Home Networking Choices
• Various Network Connection Lines
• Phoneline Networking– HomePNA (Home Phoneline Networking Alliance)
• Powerline Communication– HomePlug, CEA R7.3 (Consumer Electronics Assoc.)
• Wireless Networking– IEEE 802.11a/b/g, HomeRF, Bluetooth, ZigBee, UWB
• Structured Wiring– CAT-5, Coax, Fibre, …
©1999-2003 OSGi Alliance, All Rights Reserved
Phoneline Networking
• “No New Wire” Approach
• Available products based on HomePNA versions 1,2,3
• Phone wiring
– Has the bandwidth, is low cost and user installable
– ... BUT it has failed to capture the market (too low quantity of available phone lines)
©1999-2003 OSGi Alliance, All Rights Reserved
Powerline Communication – Current Status
• Earliest home networking technology for simple home control & automation
• Used for In-house network– Increasing market size
• Many different PLC standards and proprietary technologies
– Interoperability is not solved
• Last Mile Access technically not feasible
©1999-2003 OSGi Alliance, All Rights Reserved
Wireless LAN (WLAN)
• A key home networking technology - Consumers want mobility and „no new wires“- Growth of WLAN in home/SOHO is projected to
surpass the enterprise market
• WLAN technologies mainly focus on IEEE 802.11 family – Domination of 802.11 in the wireless home
networking space – Importance of Wi-Fi certification
Quality of Service (QoS)- Limited Stability- Limited Security- Interoperability between various specs not solved
©1999-2003 OSGi Alliance, All Rights Reserved
Wireless PAN (WPAN)
• A complementary class of wireless technologies for short range communication
• Bluetooth is a short range wireless technology for cable replacement operating in the ISM band
• ZigBee is a low cost, low power, low data rate WPAN for simple home automation devices, PC peripherals & toys
• UWB (Ultra Wideband) holds promise as a high speed technology for consumer electronics multimedia applications – not launched to European and Asian markets yet
©1999-2003 OSGi Alliance, All Rights Reserved
Home Networking Market Breakdown
©1999-2003 OSGi Alliance, All Rights Reserved
Facility Mmgt. Tech.
Facility Mmgt. Tech.
Wired: Powerline, Twisted pair, Radio coax cable, Fibre glas // Wireless: DECT, Wireless LAN, Bluetooth
ITIT Enter-tainme
nt
Enter-tainme
nt
White Goods
White Goods
VoiceVoice
Bandwidth: LowQuality: RealTime
Bandwidth: HighQuality: Lower to High
Bandwidth: LowerQuality: RealTime
Bandwidth: LowQuality: Medium
Bandwidth: Very HighQuality: High
Application: Energy Mgmt, Heating, Air Conditioning, Lights, Blends, Access Control
Application: Children Control, Gaming, Firewall, Tele-Working, Video conferences etc.
Application: VOD, Gaming, TV, MP3, Radio, Music, etc.
Application: Energy Management, Controlling etc.
Application: CLIP, SMS, Voice Butler, etc.
Facility IT Entertainment White Goods Voice Application Sharing
EHS, Proprietary, LON, EIB, X10 ...
Analog, 802.X, FireWire, USB, Proprietary, IRDA, Bluetooth ...
SIP, ISDN, POTS, H323, DECT ...
EHS, Proprietary, LON, EIB, X10 ...
FireWire, Bluetooth, 802.X, USB, Serial, IRDA ...
Residential Network Structures
©1999-2003 OSGi Alliance, All Rights Reserved
Agenda
• Current Requirements for the Networked Home
• Overview Home Standards
• Overview Home Networking Choices
• OSGi Alliance as Integration Platform
• Benefits of the OSGi Alliance
• Summary and Key Contacts
• OSGi Invitations
©1999-2003 OSGi Alliance, All Rights Reserved
The OSGi Alliance is an independent non-profit cross-industrial corporation that provides for the fair and uniform creation and distribution of relevant intellectual property – including specifications, reference implementations, and test suites – to all its Members.
What is the OSGi Alliance?
OSGi AllianceMembers by Region
41% 32%
27%
Asia/Pacific
EMEA
North/South America
©1999-2003 OSGi Alliance, All Rights Reserved
What does the OSGi Alliance do?
• The OSGi Alliance and its Members – Specify and enhance an open service delivery and
management software platform called the OSGi Service Platform
– Promote the widespread industry adoption of the Platform
– Serve as the focal point for a collaborative ecosystem of service providers, technology, industrial, consumer and automotive electronics communities
©1999-2003 OSGi Alliance, All Rights Reserved
What is the OSGi Service Platform?
The OSGi Service Platform is an open software standardthat provides a common platform for service providers, device manufacturers, and others to remotely and dynamically deliver, integrate, and manage a rich set of valuable services to building, home, mobile, vehicle and other environments.
• Release 1 May, 2000
• Release 2 October, 2001
• Release 3 1Q2003
• Publicly available at www.osgi.org
©1999-2003 OSGi Alliance, All Rights Reserved
Release 3 Extensions
Framework
OSGi Specifications Content
Execution Environment
Devic
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anag
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Log
Serv
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Http
Ser
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R1
User
Adm
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Serv
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Conf
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Pref
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Serv
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Pack
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Adm
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Perm
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R2
Conn
ecto
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vice
Posit
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XML
Pars
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ervic
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UPnP
Ser
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Jini S
ervic
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Wire
Adm
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Mea
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Star
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URL
Hand
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R3
©1999-2003 OSGi Alliance, All Rights Reserved
Horizontal attributes
• Platform Independence
• Dynamic Software Delivery
• Integration Integrity
• Network Transparency
• Centralized Scalable Management
©1999-2003 OSGi Alliance, All Rights Reserved
Agenda
• Current Requirements for the Networked Home
• Overview Home Standards
• Overview Home Networking Choices
• OSGi Alliance as Integration Platform
• Benefits of the OSGi Alliance
• Summary and Key Contacts
• OSGi Invitations
©1999-2003 OSGi Alliance, All Rights Reserved
OSGi Benefits for the Device Manufacturer
• Cost savings through... – Flexible and scalable integration platform based on
open standards
– Standardized API’s and basic libraries
– Modular platform: Decomposition of services and SW reuse
– Reduced software maintenance costs through remote diagnosis and maintenance
– Facilitation of overall dependencies (bundles, platform vendor, service provider, network)
©1999-2003 OSGi Alliance, All Rights Reserved
OSGi Benefits for the Device Manufacturer (continued)
• Decreased time to market for new applications and services through SW reuse
– Less project risk through incremental improvements instead of bottom-up re-design for each project
• Resolve life-cycle mismatch (HW/SW)
– Remote configurability, management and dynamic download of new software
– No need for expensive recalls and post sale deployment of personalized services
• Customizable and reliable security mechanism
• Reduced platform choice risk through platform independence (underlying Java technology)
©1999-2003 OSGi Alliance, All Rights Reserved
OSGi Benefits for TSP/ISP
• Extended life cycle without retrofit [Eliminate product obsolescence]
– Dynamic software downloads
– Ability to diagnose, start-stop-update and install/remove services and applications remotely
• Easier service provisioning and aggregation
– Remotely install service provisioning bundles
– Establish configuration parameters for those services
– Common provisioning formats
©1999-2003 OSGi Alliance, All Rights Reserved
OSGi Benefits for TSP/ISP (continued)
• Seamless services over different venues (home, car, mobile devices etc.)– Tunable security mechanism– Increased profits for network usage by enabling
network traffic optimization – Easier product management & diagnostics in the
field– End-point diagnostics of service performance and
update of configuration parameters
• Decouple devices from specific services– Service provider focus on services, manufacturers
provide the platform
©1999-2003 OSGi Alliance, All Rights Reserved
General Benefits for the Early Adopters
• Adoption made easier– Remote maintenance and service delivery– Increasing, evolving and improving services– Makes the best use of their time anywhere
• Secure- Connect trusted service providers to secure service
platform
• Future Proof- Dynamic services ensure the latest capabilities
©1999-2003 OSGi Alliance, All Rights Reserved
General Benefits for the Mass market
• Life made easier- Services, not technology, that save money, time,
and provide peace of mind- Connected – Services, Information, Value
• Transparent Maintenance- Embedded Hardware & Software services- Automatic upgrades
• Secure- Connect trusted service providers to secure
service platform • Low cost
- Single platform for all services
©1999-2003 OSGi Alliance, All Rights Reserved
Agenda
• Current Requirements for the Networked Home
• Overview Home Standards
• Overview Home Networking Choices
• OSGi Alliance as Integration Platform
• Benefits of the OSGi Alliance
• Summary and Key Contacts
• OSGi Invitations
©1999-2003 OSGi Alliance, All Rights Reserved
New Key Factors
• Increasing Complexity
• Increasing Customer Requirements
• Product Digitalization & New Business Models
• Internet & Broadband Availability
• Wireless Connectivity
• Family Dislocation
• Household Isolation
• Ease-of-use for Senior Customers
• Individual Treatment (Patients) and Cost-Optimization (Hospitals)
©1999-2003 OSGi Alliance, All Rights Reserved
Needs for Realization
• Standards / Integration Platform
• Simplify Technology via Plug&Play
• Reliability of Technology
• Network Capability
• Available Content and Services
• Consumer Interest (Challenge)
• Partnership / Value Chain
©1999-2003 OSGi Alliance, All Rights Reserved
OSGi Core Value
• Integration platform that fits the needs of operator driven and retail driven markets
• Support of multiple service providers on a common platform– Modularity– Tunable security mechanism– Decomposition of services
• Integration of different devices via plug&play capabilities
• Ability to complement native code environment– Augment pure Java bundles with alternative
payloads such as markup languages, graphic images, native libraries
– Integration of existing software-components
©1999-2003 OSGi Alliance, All Rights Reserved
OSGi Core Value (continued)
• Stable Technology – 3rd release of OSGi Service Platform specification
• Multiple compliant frameworks and devices available for flexibility in choice
• Relevant to ‘triple play’ (voice, video und high-speed data) service aggregation and delivery
• Strong traction in Consumer Electronics, Service Provider, Telematics/Automotive segments
• Addresses the trend to ‘network capable’ CE and mobile devices– Need to remotely and dynamically deploy, provision
and manage new and add-on applications and services
©1999-2003 OSGi Alliance, All Rights Reserved
OSGi Core Value (continued)
• Available
• Scalable
• Stable
• Secure
• Manageable
• Interoperable
• Development by global industry leaders
©1999-2003 OSGi Alliance, All Rights Reserved
Leadership Team
• President, John Barr, Motorola
• VP Marketing – Susan Schwarze, ProSyst
• VP Asia, Lawrence Chan, Echelon
• VP Americas, Dan Bandera, IBM
• VP EMEA, Staffan Truvé, Gatespace
• CTO, BJ Hargrave, IBM
• Secretary, Stan Moyer, Telcordia Technologies
• Treasurer, Jeff Lund, Echelon
• Executive Director, Deepak Kamlani, Global Inventures
• Technology Officer – Peter Kriens, aQute
• Requirements Committee – Kai Hackbarth, ProSyst
©1999-2003 OSGi Alliance, All Rights Reserved
OSGi Deployment Facts
• 26 OSGi member company deployments (non-confidential)– Smart Home/Health Care (13)– Automotive/Telematics (8)– Service Provisioning (4)
• Plus 10 EU-projects (using OSGi-certified platforms)
• More information Deployment Fact Sheet on www.osgi.org
… AND THE FUTURE LOOKS BRIGHT …
©1999-2003 OSGi Alliance, All Rights Reserved
OSGi Invitation to HNA as “OSGi Forum Korea”
• HNA as the Korean Flagship for a Connected World
- Cooperation /Partnership / Membership
- Benefit from the technical and market knowledge of the OSGi Alliance
- Contribute to the knowledge of the OSGi Alliance in the Asian Market
- Benefit from the global promotion of and by the OSGi Alliance
• Your project „10 Million homes“ will be worldwide promoted by global leaders
- ETRI as neutral chair of this „OSGi Forum Korea“• Active member of the OSGi Alliance
• Member Companies supportive
• „Asian Voice“
©1999-2003 OSGi Alliance, All Rights Reserved
OSGi Invitation to the World Congress
• OSGi 2003 Annual World Congress- 21-24 October, Düsseldorf, Germany
• 1 day workshop and 3 day Congress
• “OSGi Home, OSGi Networks, OSGi Automotive, OSGi Everywhere”
• Special Home Track- speakers from B/S/H, Echelon, EDF, Eneo, Fraunhofer, Motorola, Panasonic, Philips, Samsung
• Special Service Provider Track- speakers from Belgacom, Deutsche Telekom, France Telecom, NTT, Telia/Sonera
• And more …
• Early registration discounts at www.osgiworldcongress.com
©1999-2003 OSGi Alliance, All Rights Reserved
Gam sa ham ni da!